Micron Technology (Nasdaq: MU) has been one of the defining equity stories of 2026. Shares have gained approximately 61% since January 1, touching an all-time high of $471.34 on March 18 before consolidating in the $450-$465 range. Over the trailing twelve months, the stock has returned roughly 556%, a move driven almost entirely by a structural shift in the memory market.
The catalyst is high-bandwidth memory, or HBM — the specialized DRAM stacked in proximity to graphics processors powering generative AI workloads. Every new generation of Nvidia GPU requires substantially more HBM than its predecessor, and global supply has fallen far short of accelerating demand. Micron, alongside Samsung and SK Hynix, is one of only three companies in the world capable of producing it at scale.
Micron’s fiscal second quarter results, reported March 18, validated the run. Revenue came in at $23.86 billion — nearly triple the year-ago period and well ahead of the $20.07 billion consensus estimate. Non-GAAP earnings per share of $12.20 beat the $9.31 Wall Street forecast by 31%. Gross margins expanded to 74.4%.
The forward guidance was even more striking. Management guided Q3 fiscal 2026 revenue at $33.5 billion — a figure that, on its own, exceeds Micron’s total annual revenue for any year through fiscal 2024. Gross margins are projected at approximately 81%, with non-GAAP EPS of $19.15. The company also announced a 30% increase in its quarterly dividend, signaling confidence in sustained cash generation.
CEO Sanjay Mehrotra confirmed that volume production of HBM4 — the next generation — began in Q1 for Nvidia’s Vera Rubin platform, with HBM4e development already underway for a 2027 ramp. The company’s 2026 HBM supply is fully contracted, and management described capacity constraints as likely to persist through at least 2028. Micron has secured its first five-year supply commitment agreement, a structural departure from the historically transactional memory market.
At roughly $462, the stock trades at approximately 21.6x trailing earnings. With analysts projecting full-year fiscal 2026 revenue near $109 billion — up from management’s own prior guidance of $74 billion — the forward multiple compresses rapidly. The street-high price target now sits at $825. The bear case centers on PC market softness, HBM margin sustainability as production scales, and geopolitical risk tied to Taiwan manufacturing exposure.
Three Ways to Trade MU in the Next 90 Days
With MU’s implied volatility sitting at the 95th percentile, options are pricing substantial expected moves — a double-edged consideration that shapes which strategies make sense. Earnings are expected in mid-to-late June, falling within the 90-day window and adding a binary catalyst. The following three setups reflect different views on direction, risk tolerance, and premium environment.
Trade 1: Bull Call Spread — Defined-Risk Upside Through Q3 Earnings
| Structure | Buy $470 call / Sell $520 call, July 17 expiration |
| Rationale | Captures continued upside into Q3 earnings (mid-June) while capping cost. With IV elevated, the short $520 call meaningfully reduces net debit. |
| Max Profit | Roughly $50 per share minus net debit (~$15-18 est.) = ~$32-35 |
| Max Loss | Net debit paid (~$15-18 per share, $1,500-1,800 per contract) |
| Break-Even | ~$485-488 at expiration |
| Best Fit | Bullish traders who want leveraged upside without naked call exposure. Avoids full premium bleed of a long call in a high-IV environment. |
| Key Risk | Stock stalls below $470 through expiration; full debit lost. |
Trade 2: Short Put — Collect Premium While Targeting a Lower Entry
| Structure | Sell $420 put, July 17 expiration; hold $42,000 cash as collateral |
| Rationale | With IV near historic highs, put premiums are unusually rich. Selling a $420 put — roughly 9% below current price — generates immediate income while establishing a potential acquisition price well below market. If MU stays above $420, the full premium is kept. If assigned, shares are purchased at an effective cost basis materially below today’s price. |
| Premium Collected | ~$40-45 per share estimated (~$4,000-4,500 per contract) |
| Effective Buy Price | ~$375-380 if assigned (premium offsets cost basis) |
| Break-Even / Max Profit | Full premium kept if MU closes above $420 at expiration |
| Best Fit | Investors who want MU exposure and are comfortable owning shares at a lower price point. Outperforms a limit buy order by capturing premium regardless of assignment. Particularly compelling when IV is elevated — the same premium that makes long options expensive makes short puts lucrative. |
| Key Risk | MU drops sharply below $420 (macro shock, memory pricing reversal); assignment occurs at above-market cost on a declining stock. Not suitable without sufficient capital to accept delivery of 100 shares. |
Trade 3: Long Straddle — Volatility Play Around Q3 Earnings
| Structure | Buy $460 call + Buy $460 put, July 17 expiration |
| Rationale | Q3 earnings fall within this window and, if history is a guide, MU moves substantially on results. The stock moved sharply on Q2 results. A straddle profits if the post-earnings move exceeds the combined premium paid, regardless of direction. |
| Net Debit (est.) | ~$55-65 per share each ($11,500-12,500 per contract) at current IV |
| Break-Even Points | Roughly $329 on the downside, $590 on the upside |
| Max Loss | Full premium if stock closes exactly at $460 at expiration |
| Best Fit | Traders with directional uncertainty who believe the post-earnings magnitude will exceed current IV pricing. Also a hedge for existing MU holders. |
| Key Risk | IV crush post-earnings. Even a large move may not cover premium paid if implied volatility collapses after the print. Consider taking the position closer to earnings to limit time decay. |
Bottom Line
Micron has moved from a cyclical commodity play to a contracted, margin-expanding AI infrastructure company in the span of roughly 18 months. The fundamentals — sold-out HBM supply, 81% gross margin guidance, and a Q3 revenue guide that would have been a record full-year number two years ago — justify the elevated valuation. The risk is that the stock has already priced a great deal of that future in. For traders, that tension is the opportunity. The bull call spread bets the run continues into earnings. The cash-secured put monetizes uncertainty while building a lower-cost entry. The straddle makes no directional bet at all — it simply wagers that whatever Micron reports in June will move the stock more than the options market currently expects. Given MU’s track record of blowing past estimates, that is not an unreasonable assumption.
By: Jake Eaton
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.
Editor’s note: Jake Eaton is an entrepreneur, investor, and consultant based in Billings, MT. Mr. Eaton serves as Chairman of WDRP Management and is an investor in the parent company of this site.



