Stock Markets April 28, 2026 08:06 AM

D.A. Davidson Starts Coverage on Micron With Street-High $1,000 Target

Analyst argues AI-driven demand and multi-year contracts are reshaping memory cycles and pricing power

By Leila Farooq MU
D.A. Davidson Starts Coverage on Micron With Street-High $1,000 Target
MU

D.A. Davidson began coverage of Micron Technology with a Buy rating and a $1,000 price target, the highest among Wall Street forecasts. Analyst Gil Luria says artificial intelligence is lengthening memory cycles by creating a positive feedback loop between compute deployments and new demand, supported by multi-year supply agreements and Micron's process-node advantages.

Key Points

  • D.A. Davidson initiated coverage of Micron Technology with a Buy rating and a $1,000 price target, the highest on Wall Street.
  • Analyst Gil Luria argues AI is creating a longer memory cycle by producing a positive feedback loop between compute deployments and incremental demand, supported by multi-year strategic customer agreements.
  • Micron's node leadership (four DRAM generations, three NAND generations) and rapid HBM share gains - from ~5% in 2024 to ~21% by Q2 2025 - underpin the bullish revenue and margin outlook.

D.A. Davidson initiated coverage of Micron Technology with a Buy recommendation and a $1,000 price target on Monday, a projection the firm says is the highest on Wall Street. The broker's stance centers on the belief that artificial intelligence is changing the structural dynamics of the memory market in ways not yet fully reflected in current valuations.

Analyst Gil Luria lays out the thesis in a research note, arguing that AI-led compute rollouts are producing an unusually long memory cycle. He wrote:

"We believe artificial intelligence is creating a longer-than-usual memory cycle as compute deployment and demand generation exist in a positive feedback loop, creating a structurally higher ceiling for memory pricing and demand,"

The $1,000 target implies roughly 91% upside from Micron's most recent closing price of $524.56. D.A. Davidson's valuation framework applies a multiple of 10 times Micron's fiscal year 2030 earnings estimate of $139 per share, then discounts that figure back three years at 10% to reach the present target.

Luria contrasts this outlook with how past memory cycles unfolded, when capacity additions frequently overtook demand, margins tightened and the cycle reversed. He contends AI changes that pattern because new compute capacity often unlocks fresh use cases and incremental demand that did not exist before the infrastructure was in place.

Part of the supporting evidence for this view is the emergence of longer-term supply arrangements between memory suppliers and large cloud customers. Luria highlights a shift toward multi-year strategic customer agreements, noting that Micron became the first memory supplier to announce a five-year supply deal in March. He says Samsung and SK Hynix are reportedly engaged in comparable conversations with hyperscaler customers. The analyst notes this move away from single-year contracts materially improves demand visibility and pricing stability for memory vendors.

"We are not arguing that there isn’t a cycle, just that the duration and extent of the cycle may not be priced in properly,"

On the product and cost side, Luria points to Micron's process-node leadership as a compounding advantage. He credits Micron with four consecutive node leadership wins in DRAM and three in NAND, which the note characterizes as a persistent cost edge.

High-bandwidth memory, or HBM, is identified as a central growth driver for Micron. The analyst's estimates show Micron increasing its HBM market share from roughly 5% in 2024 to about 21% by the second quarter of 2025, a gain that would move Micron past Samsung to become the second-largest supplier in the HBM market.

"The market is still framing the cycle through the lens of prior downturns, which appears to underestimate the demand environment, especially relative to the rest of the semi complex,"

Luria concludes that when Micron's node advantages are combined with what he describes as a long-duration earnings power story driven by AI-led demand and multi-year contracts, the shares have meaningful upside potential.


Sectors affected: Semiconductor manufacturers, cloud infrastructure providers and enterprise compute customers are the primary sectors implicated by the analyst's thesis, given their roles in supplying, deploying and consuming memory products driven by AI workloads.

Risks

  • Memory markets remain cyclical - while the analyst does not dispute the existence of cycles, the timing and magnitude of cycles could differ, affecting revenue and pricing - impacts semiconductor manufacturers and investors.
  • Multi-year supply agreements may not fully insulate suppliers from demand variability - changes in hyperscaler procurement or technology could alter pricing stability - impacts cloud providers and memory suppliers.
  • Execution risk around process-node leadership and HBM capacity expansion - failure to sustain node advantages or to scale HBM production could weaken Micron's cost and market-share thesis - impacts Micron and competitors in the semiconductor sector.

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