Micron Technology's quarterly report will test whether the artificial intelligence trade can withstand its first serious valuation reckoning.
Micron Technology's quarterly report will test whether the artificial intelligence trade can withstand its first serious valuation reckoning.

Micron Technology's quarterly report will test whether the artificial intelligence trade can withstand its first serious valuation reckoning.
Micron Technology reports fiscal third-quarter earnings Wednesday after the close, with investors watching for signs AI-driven memory demand can sustain its pace.
"The results may be the most consequential earnings report for the semiconductor sector this year," Amanda Lyons, head of research at Energy Group Capital, said. "The vulnerability is in the positioning and the valuation, not in the buildout."
Analysts expect revenue of $35 billion for the quarter ended in May, according to consensus estimates compiled by Bloomberg. The company's shares have surged 269% year-to-date, driven by demand from data center operators for high-bandwidth memory used in AI training and inference. The stock fell 13% Tuesday as part of a broader technology sell-off that erased more than $1 trillion in market capitalization from the sector.
A strong report and upbeat guidance could restore confidence in the AI trade and trigger a rebound in semiconductor stocks. A miss or cautious outlook would likely accelerate the sell-off, deepening losses in the Philadelphia Semiconductor Index, which fell nearly 8% Tuesday with all 30 constituents closing lower.
The sell-off was triggered by a report that SK Hynix was slowing expansion of its AI memory chip production and shifting attention toward commodity DRAM products. Shares of SK Hynix and Samsung Electronics each plunged 12.5% Tuesday, dragging South Korea's KOSPI down 10% and triggering a trading halt. SK Hynix remains up 277% for the year, while Samsung Electronics is still higher by more than 140%.
The divergence in Tuesday's US trading showed the selective nature of the sell-off. Alphabet slipped 0.8% after losing two high-profile AI engineers to OpenAI and Anthropic. Microsoft gained 1.8%, while Amazon rose 0.6%. The selling was concentrated in chipmakers and memory-related stocks, with Qualcomm, Intel, AMD and Nvidia falling between 4% and 8%.
Guidance Will Determine the Next Move
Micron's outlook for the current quarter may matter more than its past-quarter numbers. The company's commentary on pricing, demand visibility and capital expenditure will be scrutinized for any sign that AI-related orders are decelerating. Any cautious language could reinforce concerns raised by the Korean market sell-off, while stronger guidance could help stabilize sentiment.
The report will set the tone for the semiconductor sector heading into the second half of 2026. Investors will watch the earnings call for updated segment margins and any changes to Micron's capacity expansion plans for high-bandwidth memory production.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.