Jabin Bastian
3 min read
What Happened?
Shares of memory chips maker Micron (NASDAQ:MU) fell 8.2% in the afternoon session after concerns grew over intensifying competition from a major Chinese rival amid expectations of weaker memory chip pricing.
The decline was fueled by reports that Chinese memory-chip maker ChangXin Memory Technologies (CXMT) is preparing for a massive $8.55 billion IPO, signaling a longer-term competitive threat to Micron’s business.
Adding to investor worries were signs of weakening prices, as reports indicated that AI cloud company CoreWeave was exploring financial tools to protect itself against a potential drop in memory chip costs. The sell-off was also attributed to broader profit-taking in the semiconductor sector following a strong rally. Some reports also cited cooling demand in the PC and mobile sectors and potential U.S. export restrictions on memory products as contributing factors.
The shares closed the day at $904.24, down 8% from the previous close.
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What Is The Market Telling Us
Micron’s shares are extremely volatile and have had 59 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 1 day ago when the stock gained 4.2% on the news that a cooler-than-expected June inflation report and a surprise capital expenditure warning from IBM appeared to validate AI hardware demand.
June core CPI printed flat month-over-month (2.6% year-over-year versus a 2.9% forecast), reopening the door to a friendlier interest rate environment. Also, IBM CEO Arvind Krishna revealed in a letter that IBM’s second-quarter revenue missed expectations because clients abruptly shifted their enterprise budgets toward servers, storage, and memory to secure supply-constrained AI infrastructure ahead of expected price hikes.
The combination of a macro tailwind and a fundamental read-through provided a strong setup for chip stocks. The soft inflation print lowers the discount rate, which benefits high-multiple semiconductor valuations. More importantly, IBM’s warning acts as direct confirmation that AI infrastructure spending is not slowing down. Instead, it suggests that hardware purchases are actively crowding out enterprise software budgets.