Wall Street just slapped Micron Technology (MU) with two historic price targets in the same week.
Susquehanna now projects the memory-chip maker to hit $2,000 a share, while Phillip Securities set its own call at $1,870.
Both numbers followed an exceptional third quarter that ran far ahead of expectations.
A year ago, Micron traded near $100, which makes this rapid upward shift in ratings hard to ignore.
It also raises a real question: can the business sustain the stock’s stellar price performance?
Susquehanna’s $2,000 call now tops Wall Street
According to Investing.com, Susquehanna lifted Micron to $2,000 from $1,750 and kept a Positive rating on the stock.
The trigger for this was a very impressive quarter. Revenue reached $41.46 billion, up about 346% from a year earlier.
Adjusted earnings came in at $25.11 a share, and core gross margin hit 84.9%, a level that now tops Nvidia’s.
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The company’s outlook also raises expectations. According to Yahoo Finance, Micron expects revenue of about $50 billion this quarter, well above analysts’ expectations.

The contracts that changed how Micron makes money
The real reason analysts upgraded their ratings is tied to Micron’s contract structure.
The company recently secured 16 strategic, non-cancellable “take-or-pay” agreements lasting three to five years.
Under these terms, customers must pay for their allocated chips regardless of delivery.
These high-stakes deals lock in immense volume, covering roughly one-fifth of Micron’s DRAM bits and one-third of its NAND bits.
CNBC reported that Micron expects these long-term customer agreements to generate $22 billion in revenue.
According to an SEC release, more than half of the company’s revenue will come from these contracts once they fully mature.
Crucially for investors, each major agreement includes a price floor. This guarantees a minimum selling price and shields Micron’s profit margins even if the broader memory market crashes.
Phillip Securities bets the memory shortage outlasts 2027
Phillip Securities made a bigger call.
Analyst Yik Ban Chong kept a Buy rating, but raised his price target by about 252%. He upgraded the stock to $1,870 from $530, StockAnalysis.com confirmed.
Chong’s massive upward revision is driven by an ongoing structural supply deficit.
In a TipRanks release, the analyst noted he expects the memory shortage to persist beyond 2027.
Related: Morgan Stanley resets Micron stock price target on strong AI demand
However, because new chip plants take years to build, tech giants are scrambling to lock in supply now.
This scramble has sent DRAM prices up about 215% and NAND prices up about 272% from a year earlier.
What’s fueling the bull case:
- The demand for high-bandwidth AI memory is so popular that companies have already bought all of it through 2026.
- Capitalizing on the shortage, Micron’s quarterly DRAM revenue tripled to $31.3 billion, while its NAND revenue nearly quadrupled to $9.9 billion.
- As a result, these market dynamics enabled Micron to secure 16 landmark customer agreements, cementing a minimum revenue floor of $100 billion over the next five years.
How Micron stock compares with the S&P 500 in 2026
Micron has gained about 263% in 2026, while the S&P 500 is up roughly 10% over the same stretch.
The stock added about 6% in the past five days alone, and according to MacroTrends, it recently traded near $1,145. This is after starting 2026 at close to $315 and bottoming near $103 over the past year.
Micron vs. the S&P 500 in 2026:
- Micron: up about 263% in 2026.
- S&P 500: up about 10% in 2026.
- Micron’s 52-week range: $103.38 to $1,255.00.
What still needs to happen for Micron to reach $2,000
To support its massive valuation, Micron is fast-tracking its next-generation HBM4 memory at about twice the pace of its previous generation.
This aligns with a Yahoo Finance report that the company expects the high-bandwidth memory market to cross $100 billion in 2027.
To achieve this growth, the company has raised capital spending above $25 billion and is building new plants in the U.S. and abroad.
However, cyclical volatility in the memory market remains a risk. Any sudden decline in AI demand or industry overproduction could trigger a painful collapse in memory pricing.
For long-term stakeholders, the new contracts offer more revenue visibility than memory investors have ever had.
For everyone else, the upside still relies on a single factor: the massive AI buildout that boosted Micron in the first place.