『The Micron Revolution: AI Memory and the New Supercycle』のカバーアート

The Micron Revolution: AI Memory and the New Supercycle

The Micron Revolution: AI Memory and the New Supercycle

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Micron Technology recently reached a historic milestone by crossing a $1 trillion market capitalization, propelled by an unprecedented surge in its stock price. Shares skyrocketed over 19% in a single day, reaching nearly $896, and have increased by approximately 860% over the past year, prompting major financial analysts to raise their price targets as high as $1,625.This massive valuation reflects a fundamental shift in the global semiconductor industry, which is currently entering a "supercycle" driven by the explosive demand for artificial intelligence. AI has rapidly become the dominant revenue engine for the sector, eclipsing traditional cloud computing and data centers. Modern AI systems require immense amounts of high-bandwidth memory (HBM) to process data efficiently. Consequently, memory solutions have caught up to microprocessors as the industry's top growth opportunity.Beyond sheer demand, the company is undergoing a structural business model transformation that makes its earnings highly predictable. Historically, memory chips were sold like volatile commodities, leading to severe boom-and-bust cycles. Today, the industry is locking in three-to-five-year Long-Term Agreements (LTAs) with major cloud providers. This transition guarantees demand visibility, with the company having already sold out its entire HBM4 memory capacity for 2026. Because of these contracts, the market is beginning to value the company as an essential layer of AI infrastructure rather than a cyclical hardware vendor.To support this supercycle and mitigate geopolitical supply chain risks, massive capital expenditures are underway. The business is executing an approximately $200 billion investment plan to expand memory manufacturing and research within the United States. A major component of this strategy is the production of 1-alpha DRAM at its fabrication plant in Manassas, Virginia. This represents the most advanced memory technology ever manufactured on American soil, targeting critical, long-lifecycle applications for the automotive, defense, aerospace, and networking sectors. The company is also advancing major infrastructure projects in New York, Idaho, Japan, and Singapore to ensure a resilient global supply chain.Financially, this momentum translated into exceptional fiscal second-quarter results. The company generated a record $23.9 billion in quarterly revenue—nearly tripling its earnings from the same period last year—alongside unprecedented gross margins and free cash flow. This profound financial strength enabled a 30% increase in the company's quarterly dividend.However, the industry still faces substantial risks. Generating the power required to run expanding fabrication facilities and hyperscaler data centers presents a significant energy bottleneck. Furthermore, companies must navigate geopolitical tensions, the threat of tariffs, export restrictions, and the possibility that aggressive AI infrastructure spending could eventually cool down.

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