Micron Technologies (MU) just made another quiet yet jaw-dropping move, and most investors probably missed it.
The memory-chip giant will spend nearly $24 billion on a brand-new advanced manufacturing facility in Singapore, as the sector continues to grapple with a historic memory crunch driven by AI demand.
Memory has quickly become one of the biggest bottlenecks in the tech supply chain.
AI data centers, cloud czars, and enterprise customers are scrambling to increase capacity at an unprecedented scale, pushing prices to eye-popping levels for the rest of us.
You can feel the tension on the ground.
Spend a few minutes at your local mobile phone store or talk to a PC vendor, and the conversation keeps coming back to the same thing.
So, if you felt a little AI fatigue, well, it’s now right in your face.
However, it all plays tremendously well for Micron investors as it has for the past several months.
For perspective, as many AI bellwethers like Nvidia have stumbled, Micron stock is up an impressive 43% this month and 264% in the past six.
Micron’s latest move shows it’s now reshaping its business around it.
Micron CEO Sanjay Mehrotra echoed that sentiment during a recent CNBC interview at Davos.
Moreover, Mehrotra expects memory markets to “remain tight past 2026,” while Christopher Moore, Micron’s VP of marketing, said DRAM shortages could stretch through 2028.
Clearly, Micron isn’t plugging a temporary hole here.
AI’s rapid expansion is squeezing memory markets, pushing prices higher for consumers and enterprise buyers alike.
Photo by ANDREW CABALLERO-REYNOLDS on Getty Images
Micron’s Singapore expansion targets the storage side of AI
Put simply, Micron is looking to turn Singapore into a far bigger “engine room” for its booming memory business.
AI burns through massive amounts of storage, with SSDs, data pipelines, and training data all leaning heavily on NAND.
However, it’s important to note that this isn’t exactly a quick fix, as wafer output isn’t expected until the second half of 2028.
So in many ways, Micron’s playing smart defense here, in avoiding an even bigger bottleneck for the next wave of powerful AI-led demand.
Breaking down Micron’s $24 billion commitment
- Investment size: $24 billion spread across a 10-year period, according to Reuters.
- What it is: Advanced wafer fabrication facility located within Micron’s existing NAND manufacturing complex in Singapore (providing 700,000 square feet of cleanroom space) that will cater to the breakneck demand for NAND technology driven by AI and data-centric applications
- When production starts: Wafer output launch in the second half of 2028, creating about 1,600 jobs
- HBM packaging (Singapore): Separate $7 billion advanced packaging plant located within the same complex, focused on HBM’s AI chip needs and expected to meaningfully contribute to supply in 2027
Micron’s big U.S. bets won’t pay off overnight
Along with overseas investments, Micron is laying out a long-term, ambitious plan to expand its domestic memory production capacity.
- New York (Clay megafab): The $100 billion memory campus is planned for up to an impressive four fabs. Production is slated for 2030, with a ramp through the decade. It’s part of a broader push to develop 40% of its DRAM in the U.S.
- Idaho (Boise): A $15 billion memory fab to be developed through the end of the decade is expected to substantially boost high-volume U.S. memory supply to meet data-center and automotive demand.
AI is squeezing the memory market
The current memory supply crunch is structural, and the incredible demand from the AI bigwigs is soaking up DRAM and NAND capacity.
Naturally, as I discussed earlier, it leaves a lot less supply for PCs, smartphones, consoles, and other consumer devices, and we’re already seeing that fallout in shipment forecasts.
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- Apple analyst sets bold stock target for 2026
For perspective, IDC and Counterpoint are now forecasting global smartphone revenues to drop roughly 2% in 2026, while IDC also pegs the PC market to drop at least 4.9%.
Moreover, TrendForce expects console sales to tank by 4.4%, while Counterpoint expects memory prices to rise another worrying 40% to 50% in the first quarter of 2026, after a roughly 50% increase last year.
On top of that, the pressure is intensifying on the enterprise side of things, as shown by TrendForce’s latest contract-price outlook.
- Conventional DRAM: Up 55% to 60% quarter over quarter in Q1 2026
- Server DRAM: Up more than 60% quarter over quarter
- NAND flash: Up more than 33% to 38% quarter over quarter
- Client SSDs: Prices rising by more than 40%
Related: Veteran analyst drops bombshell call on Intel stock