Micron Technology (MU) stock came within a whisker of a breakdown on Tuesday before buyers showed up and turned what looked like a disaster into a lesson in market resilience.
At its low, Micron had shed roughly $100 billion in market value. The stock dropped toward the $700 area before dip buyers stepped in with enough force to create a long lower tail on the candlestick chart — a pattern traders typically read as a rejection of lower prices. The stock trades around $804 as of the latest data.
The session started shakily. On Monday, MU had flashed an “evening star” candlestick pattern after failing to hold above the $800 level — a signal often read as bearish following a strong rally. Tuesday initially looked like confirmation of that warning.
Instead, it became something else entirely.
Part of what kept buyers interested was the developing situation at Samsung (SSNLF). A labor dispute raised fears of an 18-day strike that could disrupt chip production, tightening memory supply at a time when demand from AI applications is already putting pressure on inventory.
That backdrop gave investors a reason to look past the short-term chart noise and stay in the trade.
Micron wasn’t alone in bouncing. The PHLX Semiconductor Index gained 2.38%, and several major chip names joined the recovery. ON Semiconductor surged 11.14%, Texas Instruments added 3.78%, Analog Devices climbed 3.04%, and Nvidia was up 2.29%. Broadcom was the one notable laggard, slipping 0.60%.
For MU specifically, traders are now watching whether the $700 area holds as support. If it does, Tuesday may end up being remembered as a shakeout rather than the beginning of a reversal.
The numbers around Micron’s market cap are hard to ignore right now. With the stock up 4.83% on the day, Micron is on pace to close above a $900 billion valuation for the first time in its history, according to Dow Jones Market Data.
That would make it the 11th largest U.S. company by market cap. For reference, pharma giant Eli Lilly sits at roughly $944 billion — Micron is closing the gap. The stock needs to settle at $798.06 or above to hit the milestone.
On Wall Street, analysts remain broadly positive. MU carries a Strong Buy consensus based on 27 Buy ratings, 3 Holds, and zero Sells over the past three months. The average price target sits at $608.33, which actually implies some downside from current levels — a reflection of how fast the stock has moved.
On May 11, just days before Tuesday’s action, director Steven J. Gomo sold 2,000 MU shares in two separate transactions at weighted average prices of $786.47 and $787.60, totaling $1,574,070. He directly holds 17,139 shares following the sales, per a Form 4 filing with the SEC.
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