Micron Technology exceeds Q1 revenue and EPS expectations, forecasts strong growth driven by AI, tight supply, and record HBM demand through 2026.
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Summary
- Micron Technology reported a strong start to fiscal 2026, with revenue, gross margin, and EPS exceeding guidance due to robust execution and tight supply conditions.
- The company achieved record revenues in DRAM, NAND, HBM, and data center segments and completed agreements for their 2026 HBM supply.
- Micron Technology forecasts a 40% CAGR for the HBM total addressable market, expecting it to reach $100 billion by 2028, two years earlier than previously projected.
- The company is focusing on AI-driven demand, with technology leadership in memory essential for AI applications from data centers to edge devices.
- Micron Technology plans to increase fiscal 2026 CapEx to $20 billion, mainly to support HBM and new technology nodes, while accelerating clean room and fab construction.
- Management highlighted strong customer engagements and multi-year contracts, although supply constraints remain a challenge.
- Financial results showed a 57% year-over-year increase in revenue to $13.6 billion, with record free cash flow and net cash position improvements.
- The company anticipates strong revenue growth and record financial metrics for fiscal 2026, driven by AI and memory demand across multiple markets.
Sam, Thank you for standing by and welcome to Micron's first quarter 2026 financial call. @ this time, all participants are in listen-only mode. After the speaker's presentation, there will be a question and answer session. To ask a question during this session, you'll need to press star 11 on your telephone. telephone. If your question has been answered,
And you'd like to remove yourself from the queue, simply press star 11 again. As a reminder, today's program is being recorded and now I'd like to introduce your host for today's program, Satya Kumar, Investor Relations. Please go ahead sir. Thank you and welcome to Micron Technologies fiscal first quarter 2026 financial conference call. On the call with me today are Sanjay Mehrotra, our Chairman, President and CEO, and Mark Murphy, our CFO. Today's call is being webcast from our Investor relations site@investors.micron.com including audio and slides. In addition, the press release detailing our quarterly results has been posted on the website along with the prepared remarks for this call. Today's discussion contains forward looking statements that are subject to risks and uncertainties. These forward looking statements include statements regarding our future financial and operating performance as well as trends and expectations in our business, contractual terms, market, industry, products and regulatory and other matters. These statements are based on our current assumptions and we assume no obligation to update these statements. Please refer to our most recent financial reports on Forms 10K, Forms 10Q and our other filings with the SEC for more information on the risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from expectations. Today's discussion of financial results is presented on a non GAAP financial basis. Unless otherwise specified, a reconciliation of GAAP to non GAAP financial measures can be found on our website. I'll now turn the call over to Sanjay. Thank you Satya. Micron had an outstanding start to fiscal 2026, delivering fiscal Q1 revenue, gross margin and EPS well above the high end of our guidance. This financial performance was driven by our strong execution across end markets and products in a tight supply environment. We achieved a number of records in fiscal Q1 total company revenue, DRAM and NAND revenue as well as HBM and data center revenue and revenue in each of our business units also reached new records. We have completed agreements on price and volume for our entire calendar 2026 HBM supply including Micron's industry leading HBM4. We forecast an HBM TAM CAGR of approximately 40% through calendar 2028 from approximately $35 billion in 2025 to around $100 billion in 2028. This $100 billion HBM TAM milestone is now projected to arrive two years earlier than in our prior outlook. Remarkably, this 2028 HBM TAM projection is larger than the size of the entire DRAM market in calendar 2024. We are excited about our customized HBM4E customer engagements which offer further differentiation opportunities to us, and we continue to make excellent progress on our HBM roadmap. Memory is now essential to AI's cognitive functions, fundamentally altering its role from a system component to a strategic asset that dictates product performance from data center to the edge. This structural shift means that system capabilities heavily rely on advanced memory for real time contextual processing, which is vital for achieving autonomous and intelligent behaviors in AI data centers as well as in applications ranging from self driving cars to advanced medical diagnostics. With our technology leadership, differentiated product portfolio, strong operational execution and solid balance sheet, Micron is in the best competitive position in its history and is one of the semiconductor industry's biggest enablers of AI. We anticipate substantial new records in revenue, gross margin, EPS and free cash flow for both the second quarter and the full fiscal year 2026 and we expect our business performance to continue to strengthen through the year. Sustained and strong industry demand along with supply constraints are contributing to tight market conditions and we expect these conditions to persist beyond calendar 2026. We are making progress with customers in our discussions for multi year contracts with specific commitments. Simultaneously, we are focused on maximizing our production output from our current footprint, ramping our industry, leading technology nodes and investing in new clean room space to add to our supply capability. Micron's technology leadership is foundational to our strong competitive position. Micron has led the industry for four consecutive technology nodes in DRAM and three nodes in NAND with progressively faster yield ramps in every node. Our 1-gamma DRAM node is ramping well. 1-gamma will be the primary driver of our DRAM bit growth in calendar 2026 and will be the majority of our BIT output in the second half of the calendar year. Looking beyond one Gamma, development is underway for one Delta and one Epsilon nodes which will feature innovations that we expect to extend our differentiation and technology leadership. In NAND. We are ramping our G9 node with robust yield ramps across both data center and client SSDs. Our QLC NAND Mex including G9 QLC NAND reached a record high during the quarter. Technology transitions to G9 will be the primary driver of our NAND bit growth in calendar 2026 and we expect it to become our largest NAND node later in fiscal 2026. I'm pleased to report that calendar 2025 is a record year for Micron in terms of both internal and customer quality measures, positioning us well to deliver for our customers as the memory industry's quality leader. As our products are increasingly integrated into higher value applications, our leadership in quality is becoming a more important differentiator. Turning to our end markets as the world's leading technology companies advance toward artificial General Intelligence and transform the global economy, our customers are committing to an extraordinary multi year data center buildout. This growth in AI data center capacity is driving a significant increase in demand for high performance and high capacity memory and storage. Server unit demand has strengthened significantly and we now expect calendar 2025 server unit growth in the high teens percentage range higher than our last earnings call outlook of 10%. We expect server demand strength to continue in 2026. Server memory and storage content and performance requirements continue to increase generation to generation. Micron has a differentiated portfolio of high value data center solutions to address these requirements including our HBM high capacity server memory solutions and data center SSDs. Micron's HBM4 with industry leading speed over 11 gigabits per second is on track to ramp with high yields in the second calendar quarter of 2026. Consistent with our customers product ramp plans, our HBM4 uses advanced CMOs and advanced metallization process technologies on the base logic die and DRAM core dies which are designed and manufactured in house. This along with our unique HBM design, packaging and test capability enables Micron's industry leading performance and low power leadership. Micron pioneered the adoption of LP DRAM in the data center. Micron's low power DRAM server modules consume 1/3 the power of DDR DRAM server modules. Building on this leadership, we have sampled our 192 gigabyte LP SoC-am2 product which enables a 50% increase in capacity per module and a rack-scale LP DRAM density of over 50 terabytes. Our data center NAND portfolio revenue exceeded $1 billion in fiscal Q1 and we are seeing strong momentum across our data center SSD portfolio enabled by our leadership NAND technology. In the Performance SSD category, Micron has introduced the world's first PCIe Gen 6 SSD. Leveraging our G9 NAND, we are seeing rapidly increasing qualification commitments for this product including at hyperscalers in mainstream storage. Our SSDs based on G9 NAND are already seeing robust demand in the first quarter of calendar 2026 in capacity storage our QLC based 122 and 245 TB G9 SSDs are entering qualification at multiple hyperscale customers. PC demand continues to be driven by Windows 10 end of life and AI PCs. We forecast PC unit sales to grow high single digit percentage range in calendar 2025 above our prior expectations provided in our last earnings call of mid single digits. As we look ahead into 2026, we expect these demand drivers to continue. While memory supply constraints may affect some PC unit shipments, Micron has completed multiple OEM qualifications of our 16 gigabit 1 gamma based DDR5 and our G9 based PCIe Gen 4 QLC SSDs turning to mobile smartphone unit volumes in calendar 2025 are on track to grow in the low single digit percentage range. AI is driving memory content growth. The shipment mix of flagship smartphones with 12 gigabyte of DRAM increased to 59% in calendar Q3, more than twice the level from a year ago. Micron is accelerating innovation across our mobile DRAM portfolio. In fiscal Q1 we began sampling our breakthrough 1 gamma 16 gigabit LPDDR6 product to leading OEM and ecosystem partners, marking a major milestone in next generation memory technology. LPDDR6 will power AI at the edge, delivering over 50% higher performance and improved power efficiency for flagship smartphones and AI PCs. Micron also sampled our One Gamma LP 5x24 gigabit product and began volume shipments of the previously announced One Gamma LP 5x16 gigabit product to multiple OEMs. Turning to auto, industrial and embedded in automotive L2 and L3 adoption is driving robust demand today and our customers roadmaps indicate a significantly higher memory content in fully automated vehicles. Micron is uniquely positioned for growth with our differentiated product portfolio and automotive market share leadership. Our ASIL rated LPDDR 5X and UFS 4.1 NAND products optimized for automotive and advanced robotics that include bandwidth enhancing features are seeing strong demand and have already secured billions of dollars in design wins. In industrial demand continues to strengthen driven by the growing adoption of autonomous systems across various applications. Long term demand trend trajectory remains robust for memory and storage in industrial applications such as in factory automation, aerospace and defense, humanoid robotics, edge networking and video surveillance across both auto and industrial markets. LPDDR4X and DDR4 are also experiencing strong demand and we are making investments to provide long term supply from our Manassas, Virginia fab. Now turning to our market outlook. Over the last few months our customers AI Data center build out plans have driven a sharp increase in demand forecasts for memory and storage. We believe that the aggregate industry supply will remain substantially short of the demand for the foreseeable future. The dramatic increase in HBM demand is further challenging the supply environment due to the 3 to 1 trade ratio with DDR5 and this trade ratio only increases with future generations of hvm. Additional clean room space is necessary to address this increased demand and lead times for clean room build out or lengthening across geographies. Together, these demand and supply factors are driving tight industry conditions across DRAM and NAND and we expect tightness to persist through and beyond calendar 2026 calendar 2025 dram and nand Industry bid demand growth expectations are higher than in our last earnings call outlook we now expect calendar 2025 DRAM bid demand growth to be in the low 20% range versus high teens. Previously. We expect 2025 NAND bit demand growth to be in the high teens percentage range versus low to mid teens. Previously we expect calendar 2026 industry DRAM and NAND BIT shipment growth to be constrained by industry supply. We expect both DRAM and NAND calendar 2026 industry bid shipments to increase around 20% from 2025 levels. Micron is working hard to support our customers demand during this time and we expect to grow our DRAM and NAND bit shipments approximately 20% in calendar 2026. Despite significant efforts, we are disappointed to be unable to meet demand from our customers across all market segments. MICRON plans to increase our fiscal 2026 CapEx to approximately $20 billion versus our prior estimate of $18 billion. This increase will primarily support our HBM supply capability and also our one gamma supply. In calendar 2026 we are pulling in equipment orders and accelerating installation timelines to maximize output capability. MICRON is also investing across our global manufacturing footprint to add supply to support longer term demand. We are seeing an enthusiastic customer response to our planned US supply. We are pulling in our first Idaho Fab timeline and we now expect first wafer output in MED calendar 2027 earlier than our prior expectation of second half calendar 2027. Earlier this year we announced our plans for the second Idaho Fab which will begin construction in 2026 and be operational by the end of 2028. We are making good progress on securing necessary permits for our New York site and appreciate the partnership with the State of New York and the Trump Administration. We plan to break ground on our first New York Fab in early calendar 2026 which we expect will provide supply in 2030 and beyond in Japan, with the support of Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry (METI), we are making technology and manufacturing investments. We are enabling future DRAM technology transition in coordination with our Boise R and D team. We are also adding clean room space in our Hiroshima FAB to support these advanced nodes which will increase production scale and optimize FAB economics. In Singapore, our HPM Advanced Packaging Facility is on track to contribute meaningfully to our HBM supply in calendar 2027. As HBM becomes a part of our Singapore manufacturing footprint, we expect opportunities for synergies between NAND and DRAM production. We are pleased with the progress on our assembly and test facility in India which has initiated pilot production and will ramp in 2026. As we make progress on our strategic manufacturing initiatives, we will continue to be responsive to the market environment and disciplined with our CAPEX plans. I will now turn it over to Mark for our fiscal Q1 financial results and.
Outlook. Thank you Sanjay and good afternoon everyone. Micron delivered strong financial results for the fiscal first quarter with revenue, gross margin and EPS all exceeding the high end of our guidance. During the quarter we generated record free cash flow, reduced our debt and returned to net cash. Total fiscal Q1 revenue was $13.6 billion, up 21% sequentially and up 57% year over year, setting a quarterly record. For the third consecutive quarter. We saw sequential revenue growth across all our business units. fiscal Q1 DRAM revenue was a record $10.8 billion, up 69% year over year and represented 79% of total revenue sequentially. DRAM revenue increased 20%, FIT shipments were up slightly and prices increased approximately 20% driven by tight industry DRAM supply pricing, execution and favorable mix. fiscal Q1 NAND revenue was a record $2.7 billion, up 22% year over year and represented 20% of Micron's total revenue. Sequentially. NAND revenue increased 22%, NAND bit shipments increased in the mid to high single digit percentage range and prices increased in the mid teens percentage range driven by tight NAND industry supply pricing, execution and favorable mix. The consolidated gross margin for fiscal Q1 was 56.8%, up 11 percentage points sequentially. This improvement was driven by higher pricing with strong cost execution and favorable mix. Now turning to quarterly financial performance by business unit Cloud memory. Business unit revenue was a record $5.3 billion and represented 39% of total company revenue. Cloud Memory Business Unit (CMBU) revenue was up 16% sequentially driven by an increase in bit shipments and higher prices. Cloud Memory Business Unit (CMBU) gross margins were 66% higher by 620 basis points sequentially supported by cost execution and higher pricing. Core data center business unit revenue was a record $2.4 billion and represented 17% of total company revenue. Core Data Center Business Unit (CDBU) revenue was up 51% sequentially driven by robust bit shipments and higher pricing. Core Data Center Business Unit (CDBU) gross margins were 51%, up 990 basis points, sequentially supported by higher pricing and cost execution. Mobile and client business unit revenue was a record $4.3 billion and represented 31% of total company revenue. Mobile and Client Business Unit (MCBU) revenue was up 13% sequentially driven by higher pricing, partially offset by lower bit shipments. Mobile and Client Business Unit (MCBU) gross margins were 54%, up 17 percentage points, sequentially driven primarily by higher pricing. Automotive and embedded business unit revenue was a record $1.7 billion and represented 13% of total company revenue. Aebu revenue was up 20% sequentially driven by higher bit shipments and higher pricing. Automotive and Embedded Business Unit (AEBU) gross margins were 45%, up 14 percentage points, sequentially driven primarily by higher pricing. Operating expenses in fiscal Q1 were $1.3 billion, up $120 million quarter over quarter and in line with our guidance range. The sequential increase was driven by higher R&D expenses in support of technology and product development on our new DRAM and NAND technology nodes. We generated operating income of $6.4 billion in fiscal Q1, resulting in an operating margin of 47%, up 12 percentage points sequentially and 20 percentage points year over year. fiscal Q1 taxes were $977 million on an effective tax rate of 15.1%. Non GAAP diluted earnings per share in fiscal Q1 was $4.78 with 58% sequential growth and 167% versus the year ago quarter. Turning to cash flow and capital expenditures in fiscal Q1 operating cash flows were $8.4 billion and capital expenditures were $4.5 billion, resulting in free cash flow of $3.9 billion. fiscal Q1 free cash flow was a quarterly record, exceeding our prior record in fiscal Q4 2018 by over 20%. Ending inventory for fiscal Q1 was $8.2 billion, down $150 million sequentially with days of inventory at 126 DRAM. Inventory days remained tight and below 120 days on the balance sheet. We held $12 billion of cash and investments at quarter end and maintained $15.5 billion of liquidity when including our untapped credit facility. In fiscal Q1, we repurchased $300 million of shares as permitted by the terms of the CHIPS agreement during the quarter. We also reduced debt by $2.7 billion, paying off a $1 billion balance of term loans and redeeming $1.7 billion of senior notes. We closed the quarter with $11.8 billion of debt and a net cash balance over $250 million through the fiscal year. We expect to further strengthen our balance sheet as we generate additional free cash flow. Before turning to our outlook, I would like to share an update on how we are benefiting from AI use across micron. Today, over 80% of our professional workforce actively uses GenAI, with total usage up tenfold since last year. In manufacturing, integrating AI into yield and quality management has cut root cause identification time by half in cases, our coding teams are realizing productivity gains of 30% or more using GenAI in R&D. GenAI is accelerating development by reducing cycle times in design verification, product validation, issue triage and root cause analysis across business functions, GenAI is broadening automation opportunities and we are deploying conversational analytics to accelerate and improve decision making. We expect Micron's use of AI across the enterprise to further strengthen our competitiveness in the coming years. Now, turning to our outlook for the fiscal second quarter industry demand is greater than supply for both DRAM and nand. We expect higher price, lower cost and favorable mix to all contribute to gross margin expansion in Q2. Operating expenses for fiscal Q2 are projected to be approximately $1.38 billion. As mentioned last quarter, Micron's fiscal Q4 2026 OpEx will also reflect the effect of an additional work week in this 53 week fiscal year. We expect a fiscal Q2 and fiscal year 2026 tax rate of around 15.5%. Micron is investing in a disciplined manner across our global manufacturing footprint to better meet demand. To address tight supply demand conditions extending beyond 2026, we now project our capital spending in fiscal 2026 to be approximately $20 billion weighted to the second half of the fiscal year. We expect free cash flow to strengthen in fiscal Q2 and we expect to generate significantly higher free cash flow year over year in fiscal 2026. Any impacts that may occur due to potential new tariffs are not included in our guidance. With all these factors in mind, our non GAAP guidance for fiscal Q2 is as follows. We expect revenue to be a record $18.7 billion plus or minus $400 million, gross margin to be in the range of 68% plus or minus 100 basis points and operating expenses to be approximately $1.38 billion plus or minus $20 million based on a share count of approximately 1.15 billion shares. We expect EPS to be a record $8.42 per share plus or minus $0.20. I'll now turn it over to Sanjay to.
Close. Thank you Mark. AI driven demand is here and it is accelerating and Micron is capturing these opportunities with the best competitive position in its history. This success is built on the strength of our global team and I want to thank our team members worldwide for their hard work and dedication. We are in the most exciting time in Micron's history and the best is yet to come. We will now open for questions. Operator, can you queue up the questions? Yes sir. And I'm sure our first question comes from the line of Timothy Akiri from ubs. Timothy Akiri from ubs, your line is open. Thanks a lot Sanjay. I wanted to ask you about customer LTA's. I know we're hearing about D5 that's being bundled with HBM and in some cases even NAND. So can you just talk about these LTAs? I know it sounds like these are stretching out through 26 and in some cases even into 27. I've even heard of some stuff into 28. So can you talk about the nature of these LTA's? And then I had a follow up as well. Thanks. These are multi year contracts that we are in discussions with several of our key customers and these contracts of course involve DLAM as well as NAND with respect to terms. Of course these contracts that we are under discussion for are very different from prior LTA's. They have specific commitments in them and much stronger contract structure and beyond that I can't be giving you specifics at this point. Of course in the future if and then appropriate we'll be sharing further details. Thanks. And then Mark, I wanted to ask you about capex. So you took it up to 20 billion net but it still seems, I mean you're not guiding all fiscal 26 revenue so we don't really know what the capital intensity number is but.
It seems like it's like 25 to. 30% which is a little below your 35% metric that you usually think of. So is that because you're constrained because of fab space?? And can you just talk about does that sort of like roll into. Fiscal 27 where we would see CapEx.
Up more near that 35% range? Thank you. Thank you. And I show our next question in the queue comes comes from the line of CJ Muse from Canto Fitzgerald. Please go ahead Tatya. Back to you. CJ Muse, your line is opened. Yeah, they didn't answer the prior question. Operator. Yes, sir. Can you turn it back to Management so they can answer the prior.
Question?
Sure. Management's line is open. Please proceed. I believe the speaker's lines are muted at this time. Ladies and gentlemen, please continue to stand by. Your call will resume.
Momentarily. Operator, can you hear.
Us? Yes, we can. Now you're unmuted, sir. Please.
Proceed. Okay, not sure what happened there. We were on mute. Here. So I just want to make sure that you heard Sanjay's response. Correct. We did. Not. You did not hear Sanjay's response. Okay, thanks, Tim. So, Sanjay, we.
Heard. No, I heard Sanjay's response to the first question, but I didn't hear. Your response, Mark, to my question on. Capex and on capital.
Intensity. Okay, Tim. Okay, Tim, thank you. So you're right, Tim. We're not providing a, you know, we're not providing a full year revenue guide. We did indicate that our CapEx was going up in calendar or in fiscal 26. And you know, a substantial part of that CapEx is support dram and specifically HBM and the 1-gamma and 1-gamma ramp. You know, I would say that from 25 to 26, the plan is roughly to double the brick and mortar construction CapEx. And at this time we would expect 27 CapEx to be up. And. But I want to emphasize that Micron is going to remain disciplined on capex growth to support bit demand or bit supply and that supply will be in line with demand. As your question of capital intensity. Our capital intensity of course is dropping as the market conditions remain very constructive. And of course we are working to be very efficient with our capital.
Spend. Okay, Mark, thank you. Thank you. And I share. Our next question comes from the line of CJ Muse from Canta Fitzgerald. Please go ahead. Yeah, good afternoon. Thank you for taking the question, I guess, Mark, to follow up on the prior question around CapEx. And you know, the relative growth seems very conservative in the backdrop that we're in. And you know, it feels like that you're just sitting here without clean room space. And it also doesn't sound like you're, you know, meaningfully pulling in clean rooms. So can you talk about the philosophy there? And you know, I guess what I'm taking away from your commentary is that you're being very conservative and judicious with adding capacity.
Here. Well, I would say that we've been indicating issues with supply for several quarters that we were working inventories down that node transitions, were going to be the principal source of supply growth in fiscal 26. And that's exactly what's happening. And we know that clean room space takes time and the HBM growth, which is only picked up with AI driven demand, has further pressured supply. So there's no near term solution. As we said in the prepared remarks, the entire industry we expect to be short to demand and we're no different in that case. But we are moving quickly to do our best to provide customer supply and we have pulled in tools, we have accelerated construction in Idaho. We are doing everything we can within our existing footprint and near term capacity expansions to deliver supply, and so we provided a bit growth number for 26 and that is supply.
Constrained. And I'll just add that of course we are continuing to make the investments in technology transitions in our existing footprint and as we highlighted that 1-gamma node will be majority driver of our supply growth in 2026. And of course you've seen us make investments not only in technology transitions but also in greenfield capacity, but also enabling greater technology production capability in our existing clean rooms in Japan, And we are making the necessary investments there as well. So of course we remain disciplined. But we are very much focused and trying to work hard toward increasing our supply there and pleased with our plans for Idaho Fab 1, Idaho Fab 2, and of course New York as well. And of course in the short term very much focused on maximizing production efficiencies, maximizing our production output from the existing footprint as well. But yes, I mean demand fundamentals are pretty strong, driven by AI, from data center to edge, with the build out of our customers and supply is significantly short. And you know, I would say that in the medium term we are only able to meet about 50% to 2/3 of our demand from several key customers. So we remain extremely focused on trying to increase the supply here and making the necessary investments very helpful. And then I guess as a follow up for gross margins, obviously the guide is quite stellar. But curious as you go through calendar 26, how should we think about cost down across both DRAM and NAND? And as you transition from 3E to 4, is there anything that we should keep in mind or we should think about and contemplate in our models where there might be higher costs temporarily given yields or whatnot? Thanks so.
Much. Yes, so our CJR cost execution has been very good across both DRAM and nand. Of course we're getting some volume leverage, but spend control has been very good, yields have been good. We do have some startup costs coming in for the new fabs, new construction across the network that starts to come in second half of 26 and into 27 but at these size of the business at these levels it's a relatively small impact on margin. We're not going to provide cost guidance for the rest of the year as it depends on many factors including mix. But to our earlier question I can say that we talked about ramping one Gamma Dram and G9 NAND at Langford Supply in 26 and those ramps are proceeding well and will be a tailwind to our cost as these nodes.
Ramp. And regarding your question on HBM3E and HBM4,, as we have said we'll be beginning to ramp production of HBM4 in CQ2 time frame in line with our customer demands and of course our HBM4 is progressing extremely well, very pleased with our product, industry leading product with the highest performance of over 11 gigabits per second,. So I mean that's the highest performance and very pleased with its overall yield ramp. And we expect our HBM4 to be expecting having a faster yield ramp than our HBM3E, and of course our mix of HBM3E and HBM4, during 26 will be very much based on our overall customer demands and we will have both of these products with strong profile in our 26 revenue. Thank you. And I share our next question in the queue comes from the line of Holland sir from JPMorgan, please go ahead. Good afternoon and great job on the quarterly execution. You know just over the past three to four months as we tracked the different ASIC AI XPU programs, there's been a significant upper revision on ASIC XPU volume shipments next year. You have Google, TPU, AWS, Trainium and so on. Right? And all of these spus are still going to be using HBM3E. Have you, has the team seen this near term positive dynamic in your order book for 3e? And given that you're fully contracted for calendar 26 and what appears to be growing upside to next year's view, how is the Micron team going to try and manage this upside dynamic in 3e alongside a strong HBM4 demand profile? As I mentioned Harlan earlier that of course 2026 we'll have a mix of HBM3E and HBM4, and we have shared with you in the past that we are engaged with multiple customers with the entire ecosystem here of HBM customers and very much engaged with them and they will all contribute to our strong year over year growth in revenue in 26. And of course that will be made up of both HBM3E and HBM4,. So as I said, I mean we will continue to manage the mix of the two based on customer requirements. I can tell you that 2026 supply on HBM will be tight, non HBM DRAM will be tight as well. So we are continuing to see, as we have highlighted in our prepared remarks, tightening supply environment. And of course we see strong year over year growth in 26 for our HBM. We today upped our revenue forecast for HBM. We highlighted that by 2028 we expect it to be $100 billion TAM and, and that's two years ahead of our prior outlook. So of course HBM is on a good trajectory. And what I can also tell you is that customers as their architectures are evolving, as their platforms are evolving and these are customers across the ecosystem, of course they are requiring more and more hbm. I mean the value of memory in terms of ability to deliver the AI capabilities and the functionality and the performance. Memory is critical and more HBM is required and that's across the various AI platforms in the industry. I appreciate that Sande. And then after two to three quarters of enterprise this is the sort of muted trends, I believe the team saw a strong acceleration in the business. Right. According to some of the third party research estimates, I think your enterprise SSD business grew like 25% sequentially in the most recent.
Quarter.
Right. So you're the number three market share leader amongst eight or nine. Competitors.
Right. Very strong share position given, I would assume increasing demand trends here, expanding lead times. Is the micro team also entering into long term supplier agreements with your ESSD customers? And then secondarily, I mean SSD demand, is it more tied to expansion in inferencing workloads as customers aggressively move to monetization? In other words, is storage intensity higher on inferencing versus training workloads? So with respect to enterprise ssd, really very proud of our engineering and business teams and of course our sales teams in terms of our customer engagement and the strong momentum and the share gains that we have with our enterprise SSD. Of course our enterprise SSDs are a big part, an important part, let me say, of our data center strengthening mix. You know of course DRAM is continuing to increase in mix to our data center, but data center SSDs are an important part of our overall revenue mix. And you know, we expect to continue to focus on share gains with our strong SSD roadmap, customer engagements and great quality that we provide to the customers. And as I mentioned that our multi year contract that we are in discussions with with our several key customers, our SSDs, our data center SSDs are also part of that. And let me tell you that these multi year contracts are not just about data center customers. They also are about multiple customers across our market segments here. And in terms of your questions on you know is the SSD requirement growing with inferencing versus training, what I can tell you is that in the data center AI applications, I mean as the generative AI moves to more and more video of course that drive video greater demand for more SSDs as well. So I mean you know the rapid evolution of AI from training to inferencing and rapid evolution of AI models and applications, they're all driving greater growth of enterprise SSDs. Yes, fueled by Genai. Thanks Sanjay. And I share our next question comes from the line of Tom o' Malley from Barclays. Please go ahead. Hey guys, thanks for taking my question. Sanjay, you've been helpful in the past about kind of talking about Micron's ramp in HBM and then also the ramp of the total market. You gave some new color on HBM with the 35 billion Microsoft moving at a 40% CAGR. But Micron specifically I was curious if you could give us any color on percentage of the DRAM business today. That's HBM from a dollars perspective. And then on share as you move into next year, obviously there's a large competitor that is looking to become more competitive at 3e. We haven't heard anything on 4 yet. How do you feel about your competitive positioning into next year and do you think that you're going to make any strategic decisions differently based on the public certification of their memory in the next couple of months? Thank you very much. We feel very good about our competitive position. We feel very very good about our product and our HBM4 product that we have highlighted as industry leading performance over 11 gigabit per second the best specifications in the industry with our performance. And of course we feel very good about the power consumption in our products as well. In the past we have shared with you that how our HBN3e is 30% lower power than any of the competitors in the industry and we are maintaining that momentum of low power which you know is in data center applications is very important. So we are maintaining our performance and power and of course our strong capacity position with HBM4 roadmap as well. So we feel very good about our competitive position about our roadmap and our roadmap going beyond HPM4 hold for the future years beyond 26 as well. And we are very proud of our team's ability to execute successfully over the course of last several quarters in terms of ramping up production capabilities of HBM3E. And we shared with you that in CQ3 we reached our share of HBM3E to be in line with our, I mean our HBM share to be in line with our DRAM share. And we have always highlighted that as we have reached that share we will particularly in this tight supply environment we'll be managing the mix of our HBM as well as our non hbm. All of it is in high demand and you know HBM as well as non HBM has strong profitability. So looking at our strategic customer relationships as well as our overall profitability goals and growth objectives, we'll continue to manage that mix between HBM and non hbm. But of course HBM is growing and we have highlighted that how we expect the Tam to be $100 billion by 2028. Couple of years ahead of our prior projection and of course we will grow our HBM as well. 2026 will start see a strong year over year growth in our hvm. And you know this is a tight supply environment as I mentioned that the gap between the demand and supply for all of these including HVM is really highest that we have ever seen and I quantified it earlier as well. So in this environment of course working closely with our customers, we are continuing to manage our mix of the product here. Thank you Sanjay. As we focus on also continuing to increase supply to better address our customers demand requirements. Perfect. And then just as a follow up, you've said historically kind of the $8 billion run rate if you look at November and February you're taking up the total tam. But any color specifically on HBM contribution in the November quarter and what you're expecting in the guide. You know we are not really providing those specifics here in terms of the breakout. I mean we highlighted that in FQ1 our HVM revenue was a record. We did highlight that. And beyond that we are really not going to be providing the specifics in terms of revenue and just would tell you again that year over year in 26 we will be seeing strong growth in our HPM revenue. Thank you. And again our product is very well positioned. So I mean that's a very good place to be in in terms of managing overall mix of the business. Thank you. And I sure our Next question comes from the line of Krish Sankar from TD Cowan. Please go ahead. Thanks for taking my question and congrats on the phenomenal results and guidance. My first question is for Mark. I know you spoke about sustainability for next year. I'm kind of curious how to think about growth margins beyond the February quarter like into May. Is it going to improve or sustain at these levels? How to think about the gross margins and a follow up for Sanjay. Thanks.
Krish. We're not guiding margins beyond Q2. We did guide a record Q2 as you know 68% 1111 points sequential improvement 7 points better than the previous record. We did indicate that we would our business would strengthen through the year and so we do believe margins can be up. We do believe that they will be up for DRAM and nand. Now keep in mind that at these high gross margin levels mathematically we get less in gross margin percent for the same increase in price. So we would expect gross margins to expand beyond fiscal Q2 but we would expect that growth to be more gradual than what we've seen in the last couple of quarters or the first quarter and the second quarter.
Guide. Got it. Thanks a lot Mark. That's super.
Helpful. And Chris, just one last thing. We have indicated that strengthen through the year because we believe this constructive market environment will remain so through the year these favorable market conditions. But we also we're executing very well on cost and as Sanjay mentioned earlier we're deploying the bits to the valuable part of the market and where we can serve our customers.
Best. Got it. Super helpful Mark. Thanks for that. And Sanjay, just as a follow up to the earlier question, I understand you don't want to put some boundary conditions but a year ago you totally nailed it when you said you're going to get HBM market share close to your DRAM market share, DDR market share. So when you talk about 2028 kg of 40% 100 billion total addressable market (TAM) how to think about Micron's HBA market share in that realm should we assume it's going to be in the 20 low 20% so that spectrum or is going to be lower. Thank you. So Krish, again we are not really going to be specifying the share. As we have said we will be managing the mix of the business between HBM as well as our non hbm. It's like any other product in our portfolio that when you have a strong product roadmap across the portfolio then of course we manage the mix across our portfolio with all the strategic reasons and customer Relationships in mind. So Krish, we are not really going to break that down. And you know, all I would say is that, you know, in this current industry environment which we see as durable industry fundamentals, you know, in the foreseeable future we are in a very good position with all the tailwinds of our product portfolio and of course the increasing value of memory across the board. You know, of course hbm but also non HBM in data center and other markets. We will just remain very focused on managing the mix of our business and of course managing for the best in the midterm as well as keeping in mind the longer term. Thanks a lot Sanjay. I appreciate it. Thank you. One moment for our next question. And our next question comes from the line of Chris Stanley from Citi. Please go.
Ahead. Hey, thanks guys. So I just wanted to dig.
In on these long term customer contracts you guys are.
Negotiating. Can you give us any more.
Sense of when you think you'll be able to sign these and then maybe just talk about what the holdup.
Is? Is it just the unprecedented length or size and given that the AI.
Companies are asking for so much of.
Your capacity, are you able to get them to more or less contribute to.
The building of a new fab? Thanks. We will not really get into the specifics around our contract discussions with our customers but again I will highlight couple of important factors that customers are concerned about. Long term access to adequate memory in the environment that we are heading into and that's leading to constructive dialogues with several key customers and across our multiple markets in terms of their supply as well as other important specific commitments related to these longer term. Not getting into the specifics but as I highlighted our contract structures that we are discussing are not like anything before, you know, they are far stronger contract structures with specific commitments and of course different from prior contracts is that those used to be like money contracts and these are multi year in nature as well. And as we look at addressing the customer discussions, of course we have to look at our overall supply and I have mentioned to you that in the mid term, medium term we are only able to meet half to two thirds of the demand from our several key customers. So all of that as we are managing our customer relationships and keeping our strategic objectives in mind, all of that has to be taken into account as we manage our contract discussions. But really not getting into the specifics here, that's still very helpful Sanjay.
Thanks. And for my follow up, just a question on HBM and the pricing there. So given that the demand is.
So strong, I think you said you're sold out for 26. Are you guys locked into a set price or can you let that.
Price more or less float a little bit given how strong demand is like.
DDR5 does for example, we are really pleased with our product position and our ability to work with our customers. As we highlighted in our prepared remarks that Our HVM for 2026 is sold out in terms of volume and and our negotiations with customers have been completed for calendar year 2026 for volume as well as pricing. And as we have always highlighted that our HBM has strong profitability and of course very much focused on roi and our non HBM business also clearly has healthy profitability as reflected in the results that we produced as well as in the guidance that we have provided here.
Great. Thanks Anjay and congrats again on the.
Results. Thank you. Thank you. And I share our next question comes from the line of Vivek Arya from Bank of America securities. Please go ahead. Thanks for taking my questions. Sanjay, I'm curious at what point does increasing memory price impact demand for electronics? If you set aside the data center and the AI market, do you see some elasticity? Do you see any impact on demand as you look into 2026 for more consumer and kind of traditional enterprise products, how does that shape where memory pricing can go next year? You know, we have highlighted in our prepared remarks that in some of the consumer markets, I mean some of the unit demand may get impacted, you know, given, you know, semiconductor prices here, given memory prices here. And of course some of the customers may have, you know, for example in smartphone and PCs they may have some mix adjustments in their portfolio as well to address available supply to them. But you know, these are accounted for in our forecast that we have. And so I mean some of the possible impact on unit demand and some of the customer mix changes have been accounted for in our forecast. And we of course even then we see a very, very tight supply environment here and a large gap between the demand and supply. However, I will highlight you that AI experience experience across from data center to edge, including in these edge devices like smartphones and PCs and other devices, AI experience really more memory is essential. So without sufficient memory that AI experience the functionality, the capability does get impacted in these edge devices as well. So I mean the punchline here is that AI across the board from data center to edge is driving increase in content and increasing requirement for memory as the customers look ahead at their roadmaps. And you know, that's why customers are of course, you know working with us with respect to access to supply for their long term multi year plans here as well. Thank you. This concludes our Q and A session and today's conference call. At this time, I'd like to end today's conference call. Thank you all for participating. You may now all disconnect. Sam.