Why Micron (MU) Stock Is Falling Today

Jul 3, 2026
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Why Micron (MU) Stock Is Falling Today

What Happened?

Shares of memory chips maker Micron (NASDAQ:MU) fell 6.9% in the afternoon session after a class-action lawsuit, significant insider selling, and a broader sector-wide selloff prompted investors to take profits. 

The stock’s decline occurred despite the company recently reporting record-breaking earnings, leading to a classic “sell-the-news” reaction after a significant rally. 

Adding to the pressure, a class-action lawsuit filed in late June accused Micron and competitors Samsung and SK Hynix of conspiring to fix prices by limiting the production of certain memory chips. Furthermore, regulatory filings revealed that CEO Sanjay Mehrotra sold over $45 million in stock, fueling concerns about a potential short-term valuation peak. 

The negative sentiment was compounded by a sharp selloff in Asian semiconductor stocks, particularly South Korean rivals SK Hynix and Samsung, signaling a broader investor rethink of the AI memory sector. News that SK Hynix is planning a U.S. listing and that Apple may source memory from a Chinese rival for its devices sold in China also weighed on the stock.

The stock market overreacts to news, and big price drops can present good opportunities to buy high-quality stocks. Is now the time to buy Micron? Access our full analysis report here, it’s free.

What Is The Market Telling Us

Micron’s shares are extremely volatile and have had 55 moves greater than 5% over the last year. In that context, today’s move indicates the market considers this news meaningful but not something that would fundamentally change its perception of the business.

The previous big move we wrote about was 7 days ago when the stock gained 17.1% on the news that the company reported outstanding second quarter (fiscal Q3 2026) earnings results, guided to $50 billion in sales for the next quarter, locked in $100 billion of contracts, and said it can’t even see when supply catches up. 

Micron didn’t just beat, it guided fiscal Q4 revenue to about $50 billion versus roughly $43 billion expected, formalized about $100 billion of multi-year, take-or-pay customer contracts, and its CEO said there is “no line of sight” to supply catching up with demand before 2028. 

The quarter was a record across the board. Revenue of $41.46 billion (up 346% year-over-year, ~17% above consensus), non-GAAP EPS of $25.11 versus about $20.5 expected, and gross margin of 84.9% against 39% a year earlier powered by genuine pricing strength, with DRAM prices up in the low-60s-percent range amid a structural shortage.But the move-driver was forward visibility, not the trailing beat. FQ4 guidance of ~$50 billion revenue and ~$31 EPS (versus ~$25.31 expected) implies the cycle is accelerating, and management’s 16 Strategic Customer Agreements lock in a minimum ~$100 billion of revenue at floor prices it says secure margins above any prior peak, backed by $22 billion of customer deposits. 

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