Below you will find pages that utilize the taxonomy term “Memory Supercycle”
Micron, Sandisk, Marvell: Wall Street Stopped Pricing AI Memory and Interconnect as a Commodity Cycle
There is one argument running underneath every chip-stock target reset this week, and it is not really about chips. It is about whether memory, storage, and the wires between accelerators are commodity components that move on the old PC-and-mobile cycle, or mission-critical AI infrastructure whose demand scales with every model upgrade, every reasoning capability, and every agentic deployment.
Bank of America just answered that question with its wallet. On June 23 — a day the group was getting hit, not bid — Vivek Arya raised Micron to $1,500 from $950 and reframed DRAM and high-bandwidth memory as structural AI infrastructure rather than a cyclical good. The same desk lifted Marvell to $365 the same session and circulated a note arguing the broader memory-plus-interconnect complex represents another trillion-dollar opportunity for chip names. That is the tell. When one analyst makes the identical structural call across DRAM, NAND, and custom silicon on a down day, it is not a price target. It is a thesis.
AI's $700B Capex vs the App-Layer Revenue Curve: The Bull Case for the Crossover
The dominant worry about the AI buildout is a timing mismatch: roughly $700 billion of hyperscaler capital expenditure committed in 2026, against application revenues that critics call nascent. The bear frames this as a financing problem waiting to happen. The bull case is narrower and more mechanical, and it is worth stating in its strongest form: the capex curve and the revenue curve are shaped to cross, and the crossover is arriving now rather than at the end of the decade.
HBM Cannibalization and the DRAM Supercycle: The Supply Side of AI's Token-Growth Curve
The demand-side case for the AI buildout rests on token consumption going vertical: agentic workflows firing 10 to 20 inference calls per task, enterprise API volumes measured in billions of tokens per minute, hyperscaler revenue compounding faster than capex. That argument has a physical counterpart that rarely gets stated in the same breath. Every one of those tokens is a memory access. The token-growth curve is not an abstraction floating above the supply chain — it is the buyer standing on the other side of the DRAM and HBM order book.