Micron Added Over $1.2 Trillion In Market Cap In A Year — This Analyst Says The AI Memory Rally Has More Room To Run

In a note on Friday, Kindig argued that widespread shortages across high-bandwidth memory, conventional DRAM and NAND flash continue to give memory makers significant pricing power.
A smartphone displays the logo of Micron Technology Inc. (Photo illustration by Cheng Xin/Getty Images)
A smartphone displays the logo of Micron Technology Inc. (Photo illustration by Cheng Xin/Getty Images)
Profile Image
Rounak Jain·Stocktwits
Published Jun 26, 2026   |   10:54 AM EDT
Share
·
Add us onAdd us on Google
Loading...Loading...Loading...Loading...Loading...Loading...Loading...Loading...Loading...Loading...Loading...Loading...Loading...Loading...Loading...Loading...
  • Kindig said meaningful new memory supply is unlikely to arrive until 2028, pointing to expansion timelines from Micron as well as industry commentary from Samsung, SK Hynix, and SanDisk.
  • The analyst argued that memory has evolved from a cyclical semiconductor segment into one of AI's biggest bottlenecks, a shift she said has helped drive Micron's outsized gains.
  • Kindig also said AI systems are becoming increasingly memory-intensive, with newer chips from Nvidia and AMD requiring significantly more HBM.

Advertisement|Remove ads.

Micron Technology Inc. (MU) has added more than $1.2 trillion to its market capitalization over the past year, but IO Fund’s Beth Kindig says that the AI memory trade still has more room to run.

koyfin_20260626_064445101.png
Source: Koyfin
Read Next
Loading...
Loading...

In a note on Friday, Kindig argued that widespread shortages across high-bandwidth memory (HBM), conventional DRAM and NAND flash continue to give memory makers significant pricing power.

Micron shares were down more than 4% in Friday’s opening trade.

Advertisement|Remove ads.

Why Kindig Says The Rally Can Continue

Kindig said meaningful new memory supply is unlikely to arrive until 2028, pointing to expansion timelines from Micron as well as industry commentary from Samsung, SK Hynix Inc. (SKHY) and SanDisk Corp. (SNDK) that suggests supply will remain constrained through at least 2027. She argued that the resulting imbalance should keep pricing favorable for memory suppliers.

Kindig argued that memory has evolved from a cyclical semiconductor segment into one of AI's biggest bottlenecks, a shift she said has helped drive Micron's outsized gains.

“The question now is whether the memory trade has already run too far, or whether shortages and the upside in memory pricing support more upside,” she said, while adding that persistent supply constraints suggest the latter.

Advertisement|Remove ads.

Kindig also said AI systems are becoming increasingly memory-intensive. New generations of AI chips from Nvidia Corp. (NVDA) and Advanced Micro Devices Inc. (AMD) require substantially more HBM than their predecessors, while larger AI models and longer context windows are driving demand for additional memory across GPUs, CPUs and storage.

Risks To The AI Memory Trade

Despite her bullish outlook, Kindig said investors should keep an eye on two key risks. The first is the growing use of long-term supply agreements between hyperscalers and memory makers, which could cap pricing upside even as they provide greater demand visibility.

The second is advances in AI efficiency, such as Google's TurboQuant, which aims to reduce memory requirements by compressing key-value cache data.

Advertisement|Remove ads.

However, Kindig argued those concerns may be overstated, noting that Google continues to increase HBM capacity in its latest AI chips despite the technology, suggesting demand for high-performance memory remains robust.

What Do Retail Traders Think Of MU?

Retail sentiment on Stocktwits around Micron Technology trended in the ‘extremely bullish’ territory at the time of writing.

MU stock is up 307% year-to-date and 822% over the past 12 months. The S&P 500 ETF Trust (SPY) is up 20% over the past 12 months, while the Invesco QQQ Trust (QQQ) is up 30%.

Advertisement|Remove ads.

The iShares Semiconductor ETF (SOXX) is up 150% during this period, while the State Street Technology Select Sector SPDR ETF (XLK) is up 45%.

Also See: Apple Hiked Prices Of Its Products Due To Soaring Memory Costs — And Dan Ives Says AAPL Can Get Away With It

For updates and corrections, email newsroom[at]stocktwits[dot]com.

Advertisement|Remove ads.

Comments
Share your thoughts...

Comments posted here will also appear on symbol pages.

Follow on Google News
Read about our editorial guidelines and ethics policy

Advertisement|Remove ads.