Micron Technology just posted the kind of quarter most CEOs would frame and hang on their office wall. Revenue of $23.9 billion nearly tripled year over year, crushing analyst estimates of $20.1 billion. Earnings per share of $12.20 obliterated the $9.31 consensus. Gross margins hit 75%. Operating margins touched 69%. By every measurable standard, this was a masterclass in execution.
And the stock promptly fell off a cliff. Six straight days of selling have wiped out 22% of Micron’s value since it closed at an all-time high on March 18. That’s not a typo — the stock hit record highs the same day it reported numbers that blew away every estimate on the Street, and then investors ran for the exits anyway.
So what happened? Two things collided at once. First, Micron had already rallied 550% from its April 2025 low. At those levels, even a blowout quarter becomes a “sell the news” event. BTIG analysts noted that Micron hasn’t dropped 20% across six sessions from a 52-week high since 1999 — and back then, the stock went on to fall another 19%. The historical parallel isn’t comforting.
Second, Google threw a curveball nobody expected. The tech giant introduced TurboQuant, an AI compression algorithm that dramatically reduces memory requirements for large language models. The announcement hammered memory chip stocks across the board — SanDisk dropped 20% from its own record high in sympathy. If AI models can do more with less memory, the entire demand thesis gets questioned.
But here’s the contrarian case: Micron trades at less than 25 times 2027 consensus earnings, CFO Mark Murphy says return on capital is headed toward 50%, and the memory shortage isn’t going away overnight. Industry forecasters at DataM Intelligence project 12%-plus annual growth through 2031. The question isn’t whether Micron is a good company — it’s whether the market already priced in two years of good news in advance. For patient traders, this kind of post-earnings panic has historically been where fortunes are made. Or lost. Timing is everything.