Wall Street is getting more bullish on Micron Technology, and for good reason. The memory chip giant just wrapped up a quarter that left analysts scrambling to revise their outlooks upward. 

Morgan Stanley lifted its price target on Micron (MU) stock to $1,200 from $1,050, keeping its “Overweight” rating intact.

It reflects a fundamental shift in how the street sees Micron’s business over the next several years.

Morgan Stanley cites deal momentum and durable market conditions

According to Investing.com:

  • Morgan Stanley analyst Joseph Moore pointed to several reasons for his renewed confidence. 
  • Capital spending increases from Micron were described as measured and not excessive. 
  • More importantly, the disclosure around long-term supply agreements blew past expectations. 

Micron confirmed it has now signed 16 strategic customer agreements, or SCAs, with a mix of four very large customers, three mid-sized customers, and nine smaller automotive-focused ones. 

Most of these deals run five years, with automotive agreements set at three years. Together, they account for roughly 20% of Micron’s DRAM volume and about one-third of its NAND flash volume, with commitments extending through 2030. 

Related: Navellier explains why Micron is better than SpaceX

Fourteen of the 16 deals represent at least $100 billion in total revenue obligations, and management expects actual revenues to exceed those floors, per Investing.com.

Pricing under these agreements either operates at a fixed rate or within a set ceiling and floor.

At the ceiling, prices are roughly in line with their level in the second calendar quarter of 2025. 

On the floor, Micron still earns a gross margin well above its prior peak. That is meaningful protection in an industry known for brutal price cycles.

Chief Business Officer Sumit Sadana said on the company’s fiscal third-quarter 2026 earnings call

“These strategic customer agreements cannot be canceled. There is no provision in this agreement to allow a customer to walk away.”

Customers have also backed these commitments with upfront cash deposits.

The 16 agreements so far carry a combined $22 billion in total financial commitments, of which roughly $18 billion is cash, Sadana noted on the call.

Micron’s financials tell a strong story

Micron’s total revenues hit $37.4 billion in fiscal year ending August 2025, up nearly 49% from the prior year. In the last 12 months (LTM), it has risen by 167% to $90.3 billion.

Gross profit margin expanded to about 39.8% in August 2025 and has surged to 72.6% on a last-twelve-months basis. The operating margin on an LTM basis is 65.6%.

Net income attributable to common shareholders came in at $8.5 billion for the August 2025 period and has climbed to $50.5 billion on an LTM basis. 

More Micron:

Diluted earnings per share reached $7.59 in August 2025 and $44.17 on an LTM basis.

On the balance sheet:

  • Total assets have grown to $134.1 billion, up from $82.8 billion in August 2025. 
  • Cash and equivalents stand at $25 billion. 
  • Long-term debt is $5.1 billion, and total shareholders’ equity has risen sharply to $100.7 billion. 
  • The company’s retained earnings have expanded to $94.7 billion.

Micron’s cash flow generation is also healthy:

  • On an LTM basis, Micron generated $26.2 billion in free cash flow
  • Cash from operating activities reached $51.4 billion. 
  • Capital expenditure was $25.3 billion for the LTM period, reflecting the aggressive expansion of its Idaho and Tongluo greenfield fabs.

Put simply, this is a fundamentally strong balance sheet with expanding margins, growing retained earnings, rising equity, and robust free cash flow generation.

Micron benefits from pricing power amid strong chip demand

Bloomberg/Getty Images

AI memory demand remains robust

Here is what matters most to investors trying to understand why the stock has delivered a 860% return over the past year: demand for memory is accelerating, and supply cannot keep up.

Micron Chief Financial Officer Mark Murphy said on the earnings call that the high-bandwidth memory, or HBM, total addressable market will easily cross $100 billion in 2027. Previously, that milestone was not expected until 2028.

Customer demand for HBM, which is the premium memory chip used in artificial intelligence accelerators, extends well into 2028 and beyond. 

Sadana noted that customer demand exceeds Micron’s ability to supply, even after multiyear SCAs are signed.

“Even when we do these SCAs for multiple years, these SCAs contain volumes that are less than customers would actually like to sign up for,” Sadana said.

Murphy added that fiscal 2027 capital expenditure will come in above the mid-40s in billions, up from roughly $10 billion spent in the fourth quarter of 2026.

Wall Street broadly agrees on Micron’s upside

Several other major banks have raised their price targets on Micron, according to Investing.com

  • Raymond James moved its target to $1,500, citing AI demand. 
  • JPMorgan went to $1,540, highlighting the expansion from one SCA to 16. 
  • Susquehanna set its target at $2,000. 
  • KeyBanc raised its price target to $1,600 after strong DRAM and NAND pricing data. 
  • RBC Capital set its target at $1,500.

The consensus across the street is clear: Micron’s strategic pivot toward locked-in, long-term revenue agreements is reshaping the company’s risk profile in a way that few semiconductor names have ever managed. 

For investors watching AI infrastructure spending continue to grow, Micron increasingly looks like one of the most direct ways to play that trend.

Related: Goldman Sachs resets Micron stock target with a twist