Micron Technology has locked in roughly $100 billion in long-term customer commitments through a series of non-cancelable strategic customer agreements, backed by $22 billion in deposits, securing multi-year pricing and supply while establishing a clear floor for profitability.
Contracts secure revenue and pricing visibility
The agreements span 16 contracts covering about 20% of Micron’s DRAM shipments and roughly one-third of its NAND output. Customers include four major buyers across data center and consumer electronics, three mid-sized clients, and nine automotive companies, with contract durations ranging from three to five years.
Under the terms, Micron will hold $18 billion in unconditional cash and $4 billion in letters of credit on its balance sheet for the duration of the agreements. These deposits are returned near contract completion, raising the cost of withdrawal and reinforcing commitment.
Pricing structures vary between fixed, capped, and banded models. Even at minimum thresholds, gross margins are expected to exceed Micron’s prior peak of 62%. The company has already reported a fiscal third-quarter gross margin of 84.9%. While price caps tied to second-quarter 2026 levels limit upside, they provide consistent and predictable returns.
Fourteen of the contracts include explicit pricing mechanisms, representing about $100 billion in remaining performance obligations at minimum levels. Actual revenue may exceed this baseline if market prices rise above the contractual floors.
Strong financial performance and outlook
Micron reported fiscal third-quarter 2026 revenue of $41.46 billion, up 73.7% from the previous period. DRAM revenue reached $31.3 billion and NAND $9.9 billion, with average selling prices rising more than 60% and about 80% respectively. Non-GAAP earnings per share came in at $25.11.
Guidance for the next quarter points to $50 billion in revenue, an 86% gross margin, and earnings near $31 per share. Cash and investments rose to $26 billion, while operating cash flow reached $25.4 billion and adjusted free cash flow hit $18.3 billion. The company expects an additional $10 billion in customer deposits next quarter, further strengthening liquidity.
Capital spending rises on locked-in demand
To meet committed supply, Micron raised its fiscal 2026 net capital expenditure forecast from $25 billion to about $27 billion, directing investment toward cleanroom expansion and production capacity. The company signaled that fiscal 2027 spending will increase further as new manufacturing facilities are developed.
This spending is underpinned by the visibility provided by long-term contracts, which reduce uncertainty even as overall volumes remain exposed to broader market cycles.
Analysts lift price targets on earnings durability
Major financial institutions have revised their outlooks following the agreement disclosures. Barclays raised its share price forecast to $2,000, Morgan Stanley increased its target to $1,200, and JPMorgan lifted its projection to $1,540, all citing sustained earnings potential supported by contractual revenue streams.
Industry shift reduces volatility
The agreements mark a structural shift in the memory industry, historically known for sharp boom-and-bust cycles. Prepaid deposits and take-or-pay structures create a revenue buffer that analysts say could withstand downturns for several years, with limited new supply expected to challenge pricing floors before 2029 or 2030.
At the same time, the broader market remains tight. A global DRAM supply deficit of 4.9% is projected for 2026, the largest since 2011. Demand tied to artificial intelligence infrastructure has driven prices sharply higher, with DRAM contract prices surging as much as 90–95% quarter-over-quarter in early 2026.
The shift toward long-term contracts reflects a growing preference among large technology companies to secure supply rather than rely on volatile spot markets, dampening short-term price swings.
Cash returns set to expand after CHIPS Act limits expire
Company filings indicate that restrictions tied to U.S. CHIPS Act funding will expire after December 9, 2026. Once lifted, Micron plans to return all excess cash to shareholders, primarily through share buybacks.
The combination of locked-in revenue, strong cash generation, and upcoming capital return flexibility positions the company for sustained financial output while reducing exposure to market volatility.
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