Micron just dethroned Nvidia in gross margin
Every boom eventually forces the same question, and it is rarely the one investors ask first. Not who is growing fastest, or who has the biggest name, but who actually keeps the money.
For three years, the answer in artificial intelligence (AI) has been obvious. Nvidia (NVDA) designed the chips, Nvidia set the prices, and Nvidia collected the spoils. It became the most valuable company on earth, worth close to $5 trillion, according to CNBC, and its profitability became the bar against which every other technology company measured itself.
I have written that story more times than I can count, and the assumption underneath it always held firm. The company that designs the brains of the machine captures the value. Everyone else supplies the parts and takes what is left over.
Memory makers, by contrast, were treated as the plumbing. Useful, necessary, and almost never the story. For most of the past decade, that was a fair read of how the money actually moved through a chip cycle.
That assumption just cracked. Micron Technology (MU), the memory maker most investors had filed under commodity chip company, reported a gross margin of 84.9 percent last quarter, the highest in its 48-year history and well above Nvidia's, CNBC confirmed.
What the Micron margin crown actually means
Gross margin is the cleanest read on pricing power there is. It measures how much of every sales dollar a company keeps after paying to make the product, before salaries, research and everything else.
At 84.9 percent, Micron keeps almost 85 cents of every dollar of memory it sells before those other costs. That is the kind of economics software companies dream about, earned by a business that stamps out physical silicon.
More Tech Stocks:
- Broadcom gets major OpenAl boost in Al chip race
- Why Goldman won't pick Intel over its rivals just yet
- Nvidia CEO sends serious wake up call to all Americans
A high gross margin means customers have no real alternative but to pay what you ask. Analysts treat it as "a key gauge of pricing power," according to Investing.com.
Micron's 84.9 percent figure was up from 74.9 percent the prior quarter and just 39 percent a year earlier, according to CNBC. Margins do not move like that for companies selling interchangeable parts. They do it when a company controls something the buyer cannot get anywhere else.
For Micron, that something is high-bandwidth memory (HBM), the dense, fast memory stacked directly onto AI accelerators. CEO Sanjay Mehrotra said the quarter's results "reflect the strategic value of memory in the AI era," and the company's entire 2026 HBM supply is already sold out, The Motley Fool reports.
When I pulled Nvidia's most recent filing and set it beside Micron's quarter, the distance was wider than I expected. Nvidia reported a gross margin of 75 percent for the period that ended April 26, 2026, according to the company's filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.
Micron cleared that by nearly 10 points.
Why Micron's gross margin matters more than revenue
Revenue tells you how big a company is, while gross margin tells you how much power it has. Nvidia is still far larger, posting quarterly sales of $81.6 billion, according to its filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. Size and pricing power are not the same thing, though, and last quarter they pointed in opposite directions.
Here is how the gross margins of big tech stacked up last quarter:
- Micron led the field at 84.9 percent, a company record, according to CNBC.
- Meta Platforms came in at roughly 82 percent, CNBC reported.
- Nvidia posted 75 percent, according to its filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.
- Broadcom (AVGO) sat at 69.5 percent, CNBC noted.
- Microsoft (MSFT) reached 67.6 percent, according to CNBC.
- Alphabet (GOOGL) trailed at 62.4 percent, CNBC reported.
Micron's revenue also jumped 346 percent from a year earlier to a record $41.46 billion, according to The Motley Fool. The growth is real, but the margin is the part that should make Nvidia shareholders sit up. It says the most prized economics of this AI cycle are flowing to the part of the supply chain everyone used to ignore.
For years, the safest way to ride AI profits was to own the chip designer. This quarter argues that the supplier feeding the designer now has a claim on the same title.
How Micron pulled ahead of the chip giants
The cause is a shortage you are probably already paying for. Demand for AI memory has so outstripped supply that dynamic random-access memory (DRAM) spot prices have surged 52 percent since January, according to Investing.com.
That squeeze, nicknamed RAMageddon across trading desks, has done two things at once. It has handed Micron pricing power it has never before achieved, and it has started showing up in the cost of the devices in your pocket.
Related: Morgan Stanley resets Micron stock price target on strong AI demand
Micron then locked the advantage in. The company is signing multiyear supply deals with price floors, a structure management says keeps its margins above any past cycle, and its market value has pushed past $1 trillion on the strength of it, according to CNBC.
Customers accept those terms because they are cornered. Micron is one of only a handful of companies on earth that can make HBM at scale, The Motley Fool indicated, which is why hyperscalers building data centers agree to prices they would have laughed at a year ago.
The setup was covered by TheStreet before this print, when Wall Street was watching one Micron metric above all others. The number it was watching, HBM pricing, is exactly what powered the record margin.
What the margin king title means for your wallet
If you own an S&P 500index fund, you already own a slice of this. Micron is now one of the index's best performers of 2026, and its climb is quietly reshaping which companies the AI boom actually rewards.
The catch is the one every memory investor knows by heart. This industry is brutally cyclical, and price floors that look permanent during a shortage tend to give way once supply catches up.
Micron's crown is real today. Whether it survives the next glut is the open question hanging over the stock.
The numbers to watch from here are the guidance and the floors. Management has pointed to roughly $50 billion in revenue next quarter, according to The Motley Fool, and if those price floors hold through an eventual downturn, this stops being a one-quarter headline and starts being a different kind of company.
The lesson sitting inside this earnings report is simpler than the headline number. In the AI economy, the company that controls the scarcest part, not the most famous one, sets the price.
The next time your laptop costs more than you expected, you will know exactly who is keeping the difference.
Related: Micron ties its future to Anthropic in supply deal
The Arena Media Brands, LLC THESTREET is a registered trademark of TheStreet, Inc.
This story was originally published June 26, 2026 at 6:37 PM.