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    <title>Micron on k4i.com</title>
    <link>https://k4i.com/tags/micron/</link>
    <description>Recent content in Micron on k4i.com</description>
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    <lastBuildDate>Thu, 16 Jul 2026 06:42:19 +0300</lastBuildDate>
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    <item>
      <title>Micron&#39;s 8% Drop on the CXMT IPO and HBM Export Rumor Is Positioning, Not a Supply Shock</title>
      <link>https://k4i.com/microns-8-drop-on-the-cxmt-ipo-and-hbm-export-rumor-is-positioning-not-a-supply-shock/</link>
      <pubDate>Thu, 16 Jul 2026 06:42:19 +0300</pubDate>
      <guid>https://k4i.com/microns-8-drop-on-the-cxmt-ipo-and-hbm-export-rumor-is-positioning-not-a-supply-shock/</guid>
      <description>&lt;p&gt;Micron fell roughly 8% on Wednesday, and the tape assigned two culprits: ChangXin Memory Technologies pricing an ~$8.5 billion IPO on Shanghai&amp;rsquo;s STAR Market, and reports that Washington may impose new export controls on high-bandwidth memory. Both are real. Neither changed the memory market. The stock repriced; the physical supply, demand, and pricing that define the actual market did not.&lt;/p&gt;&#xA;&lt;p&gt;The distinction matters because it is the whole argument. The memory market is wafers, contracts, and average selling prices. An IPO is a financing event. Micron shed about $94 billion in market value against a rival worth roughly $85 billion that has not shipped one incremental chip and will not for years. No new supply hit the market because CXMT raised yuan in Shanghai. What moved was sentiment about a future supply path, applied to a name that had run 245% year to date and was overdue for a correction. That is a repricing of positioning, not a change in fundamentals.&lt;/p&gt;</description>
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      <title>The Memory Cycle Will Not End With Saturation: HBM4, CXMT, and What Actually Breaks DRAM Pricing</title>
      <link>https://k4i.com/the-memory-cycle-will-not-end-with-saturation-hbm4-cxmt-and-what-actually-breaks-dram-pricing/</link>
      <pubDate>Tue, 14 Jul 2026 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <guid>https://k4i.com/the-memory-cycle-will-not-end-with-saturation-hbm4-cxmt-and-what-actually-breaks-dram-pricing/</guid>
      <description>&lt;p&gt;The consensus bull case for memory is that the market is years away from saturation. On the demand side, that is almost certainly correct. It is also the wrong frame, and investors who anchor on it will be looking in the wrong direction when the cycle turns.&lt;/p&gt;&#xA;&lt;p&gt;Memory downturns have never been caused by demand saturation. They are caused by supply growth outrunning demand growth. Those are different failure modes, and the second one can fire while demand is still compounding at twenty percent.&lt;/p&gt;</description>
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      <title>Lutnick Presses Samsung and SK Hynix to Build US Memory Fabs: What It Means for the Memory Cycle</title>
      <link>https://k4i.com/lutnick-presses-samsung-and-sk-hynix-to-build-us-memory-fabs-what-it-means-for-the-memory-cycle/</link>
      <pubDate>Mon, 13 Jul 2026 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <guid>https://k4i.com/lutnick-presses-samsung-and-sk-hynix-to-build-us-memory-fabs-what-it-means-for-the-memory-cycle/</guid>
      <description>&lt;p&gt;Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick used a concrete-pouring ceremony at Micron&amp;rsquo;s fab site in Clay, New York, to tell Samsung Electronics and SK hynix that they will build memory fabs in the United States. Not by regulation. By envy. Micron is leading, he said, so the Koreans will feel jealous and ultimately have no choice but to follow.&lt;/p&gt;&#xA;&lt;p&gt;The remarks landed one day before SK hynix listed American Depositary Receipts on the Nasdaq, and ten days after Samsung and SK hynix announced a combined ₩800 trillion investment program in Korea&amp;rsquo;s Honam region. The sequencing is the story. Washington watched two companies that control roughly 60% of the global DRAM market commit a generational capex cycle to their home country, and responded by asking them to commit it somewhere else.&lt;/p&gt;</description>
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      <title>Memory Semiconductors July 2026: The 89% Ceiling on Earnings Revisions</title>
      <link>https://k4i.com/memory-semiconductors-july-2026-the-89-ceiling-on-earnings-revisions/</link>
      <pubDate>Wed, 08 Jul 2026 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <guid>https://k4i.com/memory-semiconductors-july-2026-the-89-ceiling-on-earnings-revisions/</guid>
      <description>&lt;p&gt;Morgan Stanley&amp;rsquo;s latest memory note doesn&amp;rsquo;t argue the trade is over — it argues the easy part is. $MU $SNDK $WDC $STX have run on a combination of pricing surprise, inventory drawdown, and relentless upward earnings revisions. The firm now says all three of those engines are running out of runway at the same time, even as it keeps the structural bull case for 2027 fully intact.&lt;/p&gt;&#xA;&lt;h2 id=&#34;the-thesis&#34;&gt;The Thesis&lt;/h2&gt;&#xA;&lt;p&gt;The setup Morgan Stanley describes is &amp;ldquo;peak rate of change,&amp;rdquo; not &amp;ldquo;peak cycle.&amp;rdquo; DRAM price growth is still positive but decelerating year-over-year, the inventory improvement curve has flattened rather than continuing to steepen, and earnings estimate revision breadth for DRAM has reportedly reached roughly 89% — a level that leaves almost no room for further upgrades to surprise the market. None of that requires demand to actually weaken. It just means the stocks have been pricing in acceleration, and acceleration is the one thing that&amp;rsquo;s statistically hard to repeat once revision breadth is already near-universal. The next real catalyst, in MS&amp;rsquo;s framing, is Q2 2026 hyperscaler earnings and capex commentary — a beat-and-raise on cloud capex extends the story, a cautious tone on AI spend, token monetization, or &amp;ldquo;chipflation&amp;rdquo; passthrough gives the correction thesis its opening.&lt;/p&gt;</description>
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      <title>Memory Stocks Just Had Their Worst Week Since April 2025 — Seven Forces Behind the Selloff</title>
      <link>https://k4i.com/memory-stocks-just-had-their-worst-week-since-april-2025-seven-forces-behind-the-selloff/</link>
      <pubDate>Sat, 04 Jul 2026 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <guid>https://k4i.com/memory-stocks-just-had-their-worst-week-since-april-2025-seven-forces-behind-the-selloff/</guid>
      <description>&lt;p&gt;The memory trade finally blinked. Micron and SanDisk each fell roughly 10.6% on Wednesday, July 1, with Western Digital and Seagate dropping 6.3% and 5.2%. Thursday brought a second leg down: SanDisk lost another 11%, Seagate 7%, Micron 4%. The Roundhill Memory ETF (DRAM) — the cleanest sector proxy, launched only in April — shed nearly 11% Wednesday and another 5% Thursday. The Philadelphia Semiconductor Index posted a 7.9% weekly decline, its worst since April 2025.&lt;/p&gt;</description>
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      <title>Micron Breaks Ground in Hiroshima: A Sound $9 Billion Bet That Arrives Exactly When the Bears Say the Glut Does</title>
      <link>https://k4i.com/micron-breaks-ground-in-hiroshima-a-sound-9-billion-bet-that-arrives-exactly-when-the-bears-say-the-glut-does/</link>
      <pubDate>Sat, 04 Jul 2026 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <guid>https://k4i.com/micron-breaks-ground-in-hiroshima-a-sound-9-billion-bet-that-arrives-exactly-when-the-bears-say-the-glut-does/</guid>
      <description>&lt;p&gt;Micron broke ground this week on a roughly $9 billion HBM fab inside its existing Hiroshima campus, with first shipments targeted for the summer of 2028. Strip away the ribbon-cutting and the strategic logic is genuinely sound: HBM is the most constrained component in the AI supply chain, Micron is the number-three player trying to close the gap on SK Hynix and Samsung, and the Japanese government is covering a large slice of the bill. Every part of that is defensible. The problem isn&amp;rsquo;t the decision — it&amp;rsquo;s the arrival date. This capacity lands in 2028, which is precisely the year the supply-glut argument that drove this week&amp;rsquo;s memory selloff says the cycle rolls over. The same event is the bull&amp;rsquo;s bottleneck-reliever and the bear&amp;rsquo;s Exhibit A, and which one it becomes won&amp;rsquo;t be knowable for two years.&lt;/p&gt;</description>
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      <title>The SRAM Question Hanging Over the Memory Trade: Does Inference Still Need HBM?</title>
      <link>https://k4i.com/the-sram-question-hanging-over-the-memory-trade-does-inference-still-need-hbm/</link>
      <pubDate>Sat, 04 Jul 2026 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <guid>https://k4i.com/the-sram-question-hanging-over-the-memory-trade-does-inference-still-need-hbm/</guid>
      <description>&lt;p&gt;The memory bull case rests on a single assumption, and it is worth stating plainly because everything else follows from it: every incremental dollar of AI compute requires proportionally more high-bandwidth memory. GPUs pair with HBM, HBM is scarce and expensive, and that scarcity is precisely what handed Micron and SK Hynix gross margins near 85% and market caps north of a trillion dollars. If the assumption holds, memory demand scales with the AI buildout indefinitely. The SRAM wildcard is the possibility that a meaningful slice of AI demand quietly stops needing the memory these companies sell.&lt;/p&gt;</description>
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      <title>SEMI Warns Washington Off Memory Market Intervention As DRAM Shortage Deepens</title>
      <link>https://k4i.com/semi-warns-washington-off-memory-market-intervention-as-dram-shortage-deepens/</link>
      <pubDate>Fri, 03 Jul 2026 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <guid>https://k4i.com/semi-warns-washington-off-memory-market-intervention-as-dram-shortage-deepens/</guid>
      <description>&lt;p&gt;The chip industry just told the White House to keep its hands off memory pricing.&lt;/p&gt;&#xA;&lt;h2 id=&#34;the-letter&#34;&gt;The Letter&lt;/h2&gt;&#xA;&lt;p&gt;SEMI, the trade association representing chipmakers and equipment suppliers, sent a letter to senior Trump administration officials warning that any government attempt to influence memory prices or production capacity would deepen the historic supply squeeze rather than fix it. The AI buildout is the driver of that squeeze, and SEMI&amp;rsquo;s ask is narrow: keep letting companies sign long-term supply agreements with customers, and extend the tax breaks already aimed at growing US output. In other words, more market mechanism, not less.&lt;/p&gt;</description>
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      <title>DRAM&#39;s Crunch Has No Quick Fix: Why Micron, Samsung and SK Hynix Keep Pricing Power Into 2027</title>
      <link>https://k4i.com/drams-crunch-has-no-quick-fix-why-micron-samsung-and-sk-hynix-keep-pricing-power-into-2027/</link>
      <pubDate>Wed, 24 Jun 2026 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <guid>https://k4i.com/drams-crunch-has-no-quick-fix-why-micron-samsung-and-sk-hynix-keep-pricing-power-into-2027/</guid>
      <description>&lt;p&gt;The Wall Street Journal headline frames the memory shortage as a problem to be solved. It isn&amp;rsquo;t. The more accurate reading of the supply picture is that the crunch is the predictable output of a fixed production base being reallocated toward AI, and there is no near-term lever — industrial or political — that changes that math before 2027. For the three companies that own the supply, that is not a crisis. It is the most durable pricing-power setup the industry has seen in a generation.&lt;/p&gt;</description>
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      <title>Micron, Sandisk, Marvell: Wall Street Stopped Pricing AI Memory and Interconnect as a Commodity Cycle</title>
      <link>https://k4i.com/micron-sandisk-marvell-wall-street-stopped-pricing-ai-memory-and-interconnect-as-a-commodity-cycle/</link>
      <pubDate>Wed, 24 Jun 2026 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <guid>https://k4i.com/micron-sandisk-marvell-wall-street-stopped-pricing-ai-memory-and-interconnect-as-a-commodity-cycle/</guid>
      <description>&lt;p&gt;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.&lt;/p&gt;&#xA;&lt;p&gt;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.&lt;/p&gt;</description>
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      <title>HBM Cannibalization and the DRAM Supercycle: The Supply Side of AI&#39;s Token-Growth Curve</title>
      <link>https://k4i.com/hbm-cannibalization-and-the-dram-supercycle-the-supply-side-of-ais-token-growth-curve/</link>
      <pubDate>Tue, 23 Jun 2026 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <guid>https://k4i.com/hbm-cannibalization-and-the-dram-supercycle-the-supply-side-of-ais-token-growth-curve/</guid>
      <description>&lt;p&gt;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.&lt;/p&gt;</description>
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      <title>Why the Memory Rally in Micron and SanDisk Is Far From Over</title>
      <link>https://k4i.com/why-the-memory-rally-in-micron-and-sandisk-is-far-from-over/</link>
      <pubDate>Sat, 20 Jun 2026 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <guid>https://k4i.com/why-the-memory-rally-in-micron-and-sandisk-is-far-from-over/</guid>
      <description>&lt;p&gt;The instinct after a move like this is to call the top. SanDisk has gained more than 4,400% over the past year. Micron has added roughly 810%. Both trade within a few dollars of their 52-week highs. Every rule of thumb says a chart like that is closer to its end than its beginning. The rules of thumb are wrong here, and the reason is structural, not technical.&lt;/p&gt;&#xA;&lt;h2 id=&#34;apple-just-confirmed-the-thesis&#34;&gt;Apple Just Confirmed the Thesis&lt;/h2&gt;&#xA;&lt;p&gt;This week Tim Cook told the Wall Street Journal that price increases across Apple&amp;rsquo;s lineup are unavoidable, and he named memory as the cause. The September iPhone 18 Pro is expected to carry the first higher sticker price, with TechInsights estimating that preserving Apple&amp;rsquo;s margin would require adding roughly $270 to the starting price. The market read Apple shares as a wash. It read the memory names as a green light.&lt;/p&gt;</description>
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      <title>SanDisk at $293 Billion: The NAND Rally, the Trillion-Dollar Math, and Whether HBF Justifies the Re-Rating</title>
      <link>https://k4i.com/sandisk-at-293-billion-the-nand-rally-the-trillion-dollar-math-and-whether-hbf-justifies-the-re-rating/</link>
      <pubDate>Tue, 16 Jun 2026 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <guid>https://k4i.com/sandisk-at-293-billion-the-nand-rally-the-trillion-dollar-math-and-whether-hbf-justifies-the-re-rating/</guid>
      <description>&lt;p&gt;SanDisk&amp;rsquo;s move from a $38.50 spinoff price to roughly $1,980 — about 5,000 percent in sixteen months — is not one rally but two stories stacked on top of each other, and the market is pricing them as if they were the same thing. Separating them is the only way to understand where the stock can go.&lt;/p&gt;&#xA;&lt;h2 id=&#34;the-thesis&#34;&gt;The Thesis&lt;/h2&gt;&#xA;&lt;p&gt;The first story is real and measurable: a NAND flash supply squeeze. AI inference has turned high-capacity flash into a constrained resource. Average selling prices per gigabyte are climbing, exabytes shipped are rising, and SanDisk has converted both into record revenue and a fiscal-2026 trajectory that Bank of America models at 176 percent growth. That is a cyclical earnings boom with unusually firm footing, anchored by multi-year contracts — five signed, three of them carrying $42 billion in minimum revenue and more than $11 billion in financial guarantees — structured so margins hold even at the price floor. This is the opposite of spot-commodity NAND, and it is what the bulls point to first.&lt;/p&gt;</description>
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      <title>Nvidia Clears Memory&#39;s Big Three for Vera Rubin HBM4 Supply</title>
      <link>https://k4i.com/nvidia-clears-memorys-big-three-for-vera-rubin-hbm4-supply/</link>
      <pubDate>Fri, 05 Jun 2026 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <guid>https://k4i.com/nvidia-clears-memorys-big-three-for-vera-rubin-hbm4-supply/</guid>
      <description>&lt;p&gt;Jensen Huang confirmed at GTC Taipei 2026 on June 1 that all three major memory manufacturers — Samsung Electronics, SK Hynix, and Micron Technology — have been qualified and are already in production as HBM4 suppliers for Nvidia&amp;rsquo;s Vera Rubin AI platform. The announcement ended months of supply-chain speculation and, for Micron, reversed a narrative that had pressured the stock since March.&lt;/p&gt;&#xA;&lt;p&gt;The qualification matters beyond the supplier list. Vera Rubin is Nvidia&amp;rsquo;s next-generation AI infrastructure platform, combining Vera CPUs with Rubin GPUs and large HBM4 memory stacks per server. It is in full production and scheduled to begin shipping in Q3 2026. HBM4 doubles the interface width of its predecessor, with the JEDEC standard supporting up to 2 TB/s per stack on a 2,048-bit bus versus approximately 1 TB/s for HBM3E. Every major hyperscaler ordering Vera Rubin systems will depend on this memory supply chain holding.&lt;/p&gt;</description>
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      <title>What the Market Inferred from Micron&#39;s Numbers, and Why It Got There Wrong</title>
      <link>https://k4i.com/what-the-market-inferred-from-microns-numbers-and-why-it-got-there-wrong/</link>
      <pubDate>Thu, 28 May 2026 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <guid>https://k4i.com/what-the-market-inferred-from-microns-numbers-and-why-it-got-there-wrong/</guid>
      <description>&lt;p&gt;Markets do not price companies. They price inferences about companies. The distinction matters, because an inference can be directionally correct and numerically reckless at the same time. Micron Technology&amp;rsquo;s crossing of one trillion dollars in market capitalization this week is a case study in exactly that failure mode: a conclusion that follows from the evidence, pushed well past what the evidence actually supports.&lt;/p&gt;&#xA;&lt;p&gt;Start with what the data says, stated without editorial softening. Micron&amp;rsquo;s second fiscal quarter 2026 delivered $23.9 billion in revenue, up 196% year-on-year. Non-GAAP gross margin reached roughly 69%, a level the company had never approached in a prior cycle. High-bandwidth memory — the stacked die architecture that feeds the bandwidth requirements of large-scale AI accelerators — is entirely sold out through calendar 2026 under binding, price-fixed contracts with hyperscalers. Micron has begun volume shipments of HBM4 aligned with Nvidia&amp;rsquo;s Vera Rubin platform. Management forecasts the HBM total addressable market expanding from approximately $35 billion in 2025 to $100 billion by 2028, a timeline pulled forward by two years from prior estimates. None of that is conjecture. It is contracted, reported, and confirmed by the buyers on the other side of those agreements.&lt;/p&gt;</description>
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