Micron Technology reported fiscal third-quarter results on Wednesday that broke its own records so comprehensively that the numbers require a moment to register: revenue of $41.46 billion in the quarter, up more than $20 billion from Q2 – which had itself been the company’s highest quarterly revenue in its 48-year history. Net income of $28.24 billion, also up over 100% from the previous high. And a gross margin of 84.9%, up from 74.9% in Q2 and from 39% a year ago. That gross margin figure is higher than Nvidia’s 75% and Meta’s approximately 82%, making Micron, a commodity memory chip manufacturer, the highest-margin major technology company in the United States. It is also the number that NewsTrackerToday holds as the lens through which everything else in this earnings report needs to be read: a gross margin that doubled in twelve months is not a story of operational excellence. It is a story of a supply crisis so severe that Micron’s customers have run out of alternatives.
The mechanism is the same one that Apple CEO Tim Cook described when he said iPhone price increases are unavoidable: the global memory supply has been commandeered by AI data centers. SK Hynix, Samsung, and Micron, the three companies that produce virtually all high-bandwidth memory for AI server chips, have redirected production capacity toward HBM at the expense of the LPDDR and DDR chips that go into smartphones, laptops, and consumer electronics. Every wafer going into HBM for an Nvidia GPU is a wafer not going into a mid-range phone. That reallocation creates a zero-sum shortage in consumer memory markets while simultaneously allowing the three HBM producers to name their price with hyperscalers who have no alternative supplier. Susquehanna analyst Mehdi Hosseini stated on television Wednesday that Micron’s customers have no choice but to pay a premium.
Liam Anderson reads the market position without sentiment: “Micron stock up 700% in a year. Market cap past $1 trillion. Stock up another 14% in extended trading after the report. That is not a company growing into its valuation; that is a company whose pricing power exceeds what its competitors or customers can neutralize in the near term. The question is not whether Micron is performing well. The question is how long the conditions that produced 84.9% gross margin persist.” Baird strategist Ross Mayfield, cited before the earnings report, framed the risk clearly: Google, Amazon, and Meta are funding custom silicon designed to reduce HBM dependency, and hyperscaler capex can be redirected when memory becomes a constraint rather than a commodity. That forward-looking risk is what NewsTrackerToday runs as the structural pressure against the record numbers.
Ethan Cole on the macro implication: “AI data center spending drives memory prices up. Higher memory prices pass through to devices. Apple says iPhone prices are unavoidable. Laptop makers say the same. Consumer electronics are getting more expensive because hyperscalers are building AI infrastructure. That is a tax on consumer spending with no ballot initiative attached.” Micron CFO Mark Murphy described Q3 gross margin as having “more than doubled from a year ago” and confirmed it set a new company record. He said on the earnings call that data center companies continue to absorb all the memory they can find to meet AI demand. Revenue of $41.46 billion implies a revenue run rate above $160 billion annually from a company that generated $29.3 billion in all of fiscal 2023. The speed of the revenue expansion reflects both volume growth and the pricing power that the supply reallocation has created.
The share price trajectory adds its own context. Micron’s stock has risen over 700% in the past year, pushing its market capitalization past $1 trillion. That performance makes Micron one of the best-performing large-cap stocks in the world over that period, ahead of Nvidia on a twelve-month basis. But a stock that has tripled its gross margin and grown revenue by $20 billion in a single quarter sits at a specific kind of risk: when conditions normalize, the reversion can be severe. The last major memory cycle downturn, in 2022 and 2023, saw Micron’s gross margin fall to negative 31% – the company was losing money on every chip sold. The 84.9% reading is the peak of the same cyclical swing in the opposite direction, and that historical pattern is what NewsTrackerToday catches as the number sitting behind the records.
The uncomfortable implication of Micron’s Q3 is not that the company is doing anything wrong. Pricing at what the market will bear, when the market will bear it, is basic capitalism. The uncomfortable implication is that the market currently bearing it is a market of captive buyers – hyperscalers who cannot afford to fall behind in AI infrastructure, smartphone makers who cannot redesign their products quickly enough to avoid the price increase, and consumers who will pay more for devices because a different class of customer is buying the same raw material at any price. The structural redistribution of memory capacity toward AI is what News Tracker Today marks as the condition that produced Wednesday’s record: visible in a company’s gross margin, invisible in any other single statistic.