Last Trading Date: New York Feb 10, 2026
Shares of Micron Technology, Inc. (NASDAQ: MU) finished lower in yesterday’s trading session, reacting to renewed industry chatter around its role as a supplier of high-bandwidth memory (HBM4) for Nvidia’s next-generation AI chips. Micron’s stock closed at $373.25, down 2.67% from its February 9 finish, according to market data. In after-hours activity following the regular session, the shares continued to trade slightly weaker, slipping approximately 0.23% to around $372.39 as of 8 PM ET, reflecting lingering skepticism among traders into the evening.(Yahoo Finance)
The catalyst for the pullback centered on reports that Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix could secure a disproportionate share of HBM4 orders for Nvidia’s “Vera Rubin” platform, leaving Micron’s participation—and thus a critical revenue stream—in question. Samsung’s announcement that it will begin HBM4 mass production later this month weighed on sentiment, pressuring chip peers alongside MU’s decline.(Barron’s)
Despite the near-term decline, broader market context showed mixed signals heading into the session. Earlier in the week, major U.S. indexes such as the Dow Jones Industrial Average, S&P 500, and Nasdaq had posted gains following strong macro data and renewed risk appetite in tech names, though momentum faded as semiconductor supply chain concerns resurfaced.(Investors)
Analysts have responded to Micron’s evolving outlook with a broad array of price-target adjustments in recent months. Bernstein raised its price target to $330 while maintaining an Outperform rating, citing strong DRAM pricing and robust AI-driven demand projections.(Investing)
Meanwhile, Piper Sandler boosted its target more aggressively to $400 under an Overweight stance, reflecting confidence in Micron’s strategic positioning. Rosenblatt’s earlier hike to $300 and Buy rating further underscores long-term optimism among parts of the Street. Not all views are uniformly bullish—some analysts have highlighted execution risks tied to memory cycles and competitive dynamics—but the prevailing trend in price targets has been upward over the past several quarters.(GuruFocus)
Investor concerns about HBM4 share have not completely overshadowed Micron’s underlying trajectory. Fiscal results earlier this year showed significant outperformance—record quarterly sales and guidance that exceeded consensus—and many analysts remain upbeat on structural demand for memory linked to artificial intelligence workloads. Furthermore, research from Deutsche Bank anticipates continued strength in DRAM/HBM pricing and tight industry supply through at least 2027, laying a foundation for future earnings power.(MarketWatch)
