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Micron Technology (NASDAQ:MU) CEO Sanjay Mehrotra has been consistent about where his company is headed. “We are investing in global manufacturing in our global manufacturing footprint to support their growing demand,” Mehrotra said, referring to Micron’s customers. That’s not boilerplate executive language. It’s a specific strategic posture built around a window that’s opening right now and closing quickly.
2026 Is a Seller’s Market for Memory
For calendar year 2026, every major memory maker, including Micron, is relying on process technology migration rather than new physical capacity expansion. No new CapEx-driven capacity is expected to come online until 2027. What that means practically: if a memory maker says they’re sold out this year, they actually are. And sold-out capacity, by definition, comes with favorable pricing power.
Micron’s numbers back this up. The company reported record revenue, income, and cash flow for fiscal Q2 2026, driven by strong AI-driven demand for memory components. Revenue guidance for Q2 FY2026 came in at $18.70 billion, with non-GAAP EPS guidance of $8.42. Gross margin guidance reached 68% on a non-GAAP basis. These are not cyclical bounce numbers. These are structural demand numbers.
Mehrotra framed it directly on the Q1 FY2026 earnings call: “Our Q2 outlook reflects substantial records across revenue, gross margin, EPS and free cash flow, and we anticipate our business performance to continue strengthening through fiscal 2026.”
The 2027 Expansion Timeline
New CapEx capacity expansion is expected to arrive in 2027. If a fab shell is already in place, new capacity can come online in as little as 6 months. Without the shell, the timeline extends to 6 to 12 months, followed by additional time for yield optimization. Micron’s global manufacturing investments today are essentially pre-positioning for that ramp.
Mehrotra has also leaned into Micron’s unique geopolitical advantage: “As the only U.S.-based memory manufacturer, Micron is uniquely positioned to capitalize on the AI opportunity ahead.” That’s a moat that Samsung and SK Hynix simply cannot replicate for American customers prioritizing supply chain security.
The stock has reflected this momentum. MU shares are up 55.66% year-to-date and 336.73% over the past year. Analysts describe Micron as being in the “early innings” of its growth cycle, and the 2026 capacity constraint environment gives that framing real teeth.
The 2026 pricing environment is favorable by design, driven by constrained supply and strong AI-driven demand. The 2027 capacity expansion is already being built into Micron’s global manufacturing footprint. Mehrotra’s strategy appears to be threading that needle deliberately, positioning the company ahead of the next capacity ramp.