No Result
View All Result
Mobile
Subscription
  • Home
  • Britain
  • China
  • Business
  • World
  • Culture
  • Opinion
  • Newspaper
Wednesday, June 3, 2026
中文
  • Home
  • Britain
  • China
  • Business
  • World
  • Culture
  • Opinion
  • Newspaper
No Result
View All Result
Sky Eco News
No Result
View All Result

How a nudge from Nvidia propelled frugal Micron into the AI boom and a $1 trillion market cap

How a nudge from Nvidia propelled frugal Micron into the AI boom and a $1 trillion market cap

FILE PHOTO: A Micron logo appears in this illustration taken August 25, 2025. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo

Micron Technology’s march toward a $1 trillion valuation is nothing if not dramatic: a year ago it was a little over $100 billion.

That surge, though, was not built on its famed frugality, but on a nearly too-late push from Nvidia that pulled the U.S. memory chipmaker into the center of the AI boom.

For decades, the Idaho-based company survived by building factories on a shoestring budget, adopting used equipment and avoiding cutting-edge bets.

That discipline helped it endure brutal boom-bust cycles in memory chips and outlast rivals, leaving it one of three global suppliers alongside South Korea’s Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix.

But that approach of treating memory chips as a commodity clashed with Nvidia’s vision for AI.

Three years ago, Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang met Micron boss Sanjay Mehrotra and outlined how he expected the memory market to evolve, Huang said in a media interview last month. Huang had long bet early that memory, and not just processors, would become a critical bottleneck for AI, forcing suppliers like Micron to rethink both technology and spending.

“I was really grateful that Micron and Nvidia really lined up all of our road map,” Huang said in the interview.

As Nvidia and other AI leaders rewired data centers, memory shifted from a commodity component to specialized high bandwidth memory (HBM) chips tailored to specific processors. These chips are co-designed for customers, making Micron’s offerings for Nvidia distinct from those it sells to Advanced Micro Devices or others.

Micron’s chips are now tightly integrated into AI systems, including Nvidia’s upcoming Vera Rubin platform. That alignment reshaped Micron’s trajectory, pulling it into long-term, higher-margin deals and giving investors greater confidence in its earnings.

Micron’s stock has surged roughly ten-fold over the past year. The company crossed the $1 trillion market capitalization on May 26, joining an elite group of trillion-dollar firms including Samsung. A day later, Hynix hit that mark.

Separately, Marvell Technology’s shares hit a record high on Tuesday after Huang called the custom chipmaker the next “trillion-dollar company” during the Computex week in Taipei.

AI GROWTH RESHAPES MICRON’S TRAJECTORY

Micron expects the HBM market it serves to grow to about $100 billion by 2028. It posted a $14 billion profit in the latest quarter, a striking turnaround from the $5.8 billion loss it posted as recently as 2023, when the memory cycle turned and demand collapsed.

That rebound follows a misstep.

For years, memory was a commodity business, with customers such as Apple and Dell able to switch suppliers easily and drive down prices. That volatility made Micron wary of betting early on high-bandwidth memory, even as South Korean rivals pushed ahead.

Nvidia’s AI build-out forced a rethink. Micron said in March it had signed its first five-year supply agreement, a landmark shift for an industry long driven by short-term pricing swings.

Analysts expect Nvidia to be central to those arrangements, though neither company has confirmed it. “They are seeing long-term customer demand, with real commitment,” said Ben Bajarin of Creative Strategies. “That is the key driver getting them to spend money.”

REMAINING NIMBLE IN A CYCLICAL MARKET

Micron’s old habits have not entirely disappeared and may still be an advantage, even as the company adapts them for a faster-moving market.

The challenge now is speed. Under Mehrotra, Micron has focused on shortening development cycles and quickly fixing production issues, a critical capability in AI where missing technical specifications can cost lucrative supply deals.

Micron’s position as the only major U.S.-based memory supplier also adds an edge as customers diversify away from Korea and governments push for domestic supply chains. But the real test will come when the cycle turns again.

Analysts expect AI to make the memory market structurally larger, but not immune to slowdowns. When that happens, Micron’s longstanding discipline — the same frugality that once held it back — could again set it apart.

“In the early days, nobody gave Micron a chance,” said Dan Hutcheson, vice chair of technology consulting firm TechInsights. “They’ve always had that back-against-the-wall attitude. If they lose that, like Intel lost it, they’ll die.”

(Reporting by Stephen Nellis)

Post Related

Iran war hands Syria windfall as airlines reroute over its airspace

Iran war hands Syria windfall as airlines reroute over its airspace

Syria recorded nearly 12,000 aircraft transits in May as regional airlines rerouted around airspace disrupted by conflict in the Middle...

Baton Rouge to Melbourne: Iran war and rising prices upend jet fuel trade

Baton Rouge to Melbourne: Iran war and rising prices upend jet fuel trade

From Antwerp to the Seychelles, Baton Rouge to Melbourne, or New York to Namibia, the closure of the Strait of...

Trump says Iran war is worth the economic pain.These rural voters agree

Trump says Iran war is worth the economic pain.These rural voters agree

Perched behind the cash register at Stubs liquor store,Amy Van Duyn gazed out the window at a red-and-green gasoline price...

Iran, Ukraine wars deliver worst hit in years to oil refining output

Iran, Ukraine wars deliver worst hit in years to oil refining output

Refinery attacks tied to the wars in Iran and Ukraine have knocked out nearly 9% of global oil refining capacity...

Jet fuel crisis, what crisis? European airlines downplay fears of summer shortage

Jet fuel crisis, what crisis? European airlines downplay fears of summer shortage

European airlines, airports and tour operators are striking a bullish tone on jet fuel supply despite one of the worst...

As Iran war jolts Air India, Lufthansa and Cathay pounce on fast-growing market

As Iran war jolts Air India, Lufthansa and Cathay pounce on fast-growing market

Air India's thousands of flight cuts due to the Iran war and Pakistan's airspace ban have become a boon for...

Top news

  • A strong El Nino may be imminent. Climate change will make its effects worse
  • How a nudge from Nvidia propelled frugal Micron into the AI boom and a $1 trillion market cap
  • China owns more than 11,000 German-developed patents, IW study shows
  • China’s carmakers expand their presence in Europe
  • Nvidia launches new chip to bring AI directly to personal computers
SKY ECO NEWS

© 2024 SEMG.

About Us

  • Chinese Emassy, London
  • Embassy of the United Kingdom
  • Xinhua
  • People’s Daily
  • China Daily
  • GlobalTimes
  • The Times
  • BBC

Message

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Britain
  • China
  • Business
  • World
  • Culture
  • Opinion
  • Newspaper

© 2024 SEMG.