Investing

Why is Micron stock falling 7% today?

Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr

Shares of Micron Technology (MU) fell sharply on Monday as investors weighed the impact of potential labor disruptions at rival Samsung Electronics and broader questions surrounding the future of memory-chip demand in the artificial intelligence market.

Micron stock dropped more than 7% by midday trading, extending losses after a 6.6% decline on Friday.

If losses hold through the close, the stock would mark its third consecutive down day following a massive rally that has pushed shares up more than 140% in 2026 and over sevenfold during the past 12 months.

The recent gains have been fueled largely by an acute shortage of memory chips tied to surging demand from AI infrastructure spending.

Investors are now closely watching developments at Samsung, where labor tensions could further tighten global supply conditions.

Samsung strike threat raises supply concerns

Samsung workers are currently demanding that the company allocate 15% of operating profit toward bonuses and have threatened a general strike from May 21 through June 7.

According to estimates from Jefferies, a large-scale walkout could disrupt roughly 3% of global memory-chip production.

Management and union leaders resumed negotiations Monday in an effort to avoid a strike, with talks expected to continue into Tuesday.

South Korean Prime Minister Kim Min-seok warned that the government would explore all available options to prevent disruptions, noting that even a single day of suspended operations at Samsung’s chip assembly facilities could create losses of up to 1 trillion won, or roughly $667.6 million.

A local court reportedly ordered Samsung’s union to maintain staffing levels necessary for safety during any labor action, though the court stopped short of blocking the strike entirely.

Despite concerns about operational disruptions, Samsung shares rose roughly 3.9% during local trading Monday.

For Micron and the broader memory-chip sector, analysts said any production interruptions at Samsung could intensify already tight supply conditions and help support elevated memory pricing for a longer period.

Analysts see structural shift in memory market

Beyond the short-term labor concerns, analysts continue debating whether the memory-chip industry is entering a more structurally favorable cycle.

JP Morgan analyst Jay Kwon wrote Monday that higher pricing conditions could persist until at least late 2027 as long-term supply agreements help stabilize the traditionally cyclical memory market.

“We believe the memory industry is undergoing a pivotal inflection stage that could structurally improve its business model and pave the path for a valuation re-rate from traditional P/B [price-to-book] valuation to P/E [price-to-earnings] valuation,” Kwon wrote.

At the same time, investors were also digesting comments from Western Digital and Seagate Technology regarding future storage trends tied to artificial intelligence systems.

Western Digital said it is qualifying new high-capacity Ultrastar UltraSMR hard drives and argued that AI workloads may increasingly prioritize long-term data storage and durability over ultra-fast data transfer speeds.

The company suggested that hard disk drives could eventually become more useful and cost-efficient than solid-state drives for certain AI-related applications.

SSD demand remains strong despite shifting outlook

Separately, Seagate CEO Dave Mosely reportedly said the company remains concerned about balancing rising demand for solid-state drives against the risk of overbuilding manufacturing capacity.

According to reports, Seagate believes customer demand for SSDs remains extremely strong, though the company is cautious about aggressively expanding factory capacity in ways that could later contribute to oversupply across the semiconductor industry.

Those comments reinforced broader expectations that NAND and DRAM memory demand tied to AI infrastructure spending remains robust even as investors reassess valuations after the semiconductor sector’s historic rally.

The post Why is Micron stock falling 7% today? appeared first on Invezz