Who owns Micron Technology? A look at its top investors
Micron Technology (MU) became one of the world's most valuable companies in 2026, but not too long ago, it was a four-person consulting firm operating out of the basement of a dental office in Boise, Idaho. Now, it has millions of owners, including company executives, institutional investors like hedge funds, and individual investors who own shares either directly or through ETFs.
Over the past four decades, the semiconductor manufacturer has pioneered major innovations in DRAM system memory, high-density storage, and high-bandwidth memory for large-scale AI models.
Micron eventually outgrew its basement headquarters, building its first fabrication plant in Idaho before expanding into Texas, New York, and, later, around the world.
The company's latest earnings report underscored sizzling demand for the memory powering AI infrastructure - particularly High Bandwidth Memory (HBM) - helping propel Micron's shares nearly 1,000% between June 2025 and June 2026.
But its success hasn't always been a smooth ride. The semiconductor industry has been one of Wall Street's most volatile sectors, and Micron's shareholders have weathered both extreme highs and crushing lows. Yet many of its biggest investors have remained firmly committed.
Here's a look at Micron's largest institutional owners as well as which executives have the biggest ownership stakes.
Who owns Micron Technology?
Micron is a publicly traded company listed on the Nasdaq exchange. It is owned by large institutional investors, such as hedge funds, as well as company executives and retail investors. As of June 2026, there were 1.1 billion shares outstanding, according to Fidelity Investments.
Related: Does Micron pay dividends? Its yield and payouts explained
Who are Micron Technology's biggest investors?
The memory chip giant is 80% owned by institutional investors, with its three biggest shareholders at the end of 2025 being Vanguard Group (with a 9.45% stake), BlackRock (8.93%), and Capital World Investors (5.17%), according to Micron's proxy statement.
The biggest owners of Micron stock
| Investor | Shares (in millions) | % stake |
|---|---|---|
Vanguard Group | 106.61 | 9.45% |
BlackRock | 100.7 | 8.93% |
Capital World Investors | 58.25 | 5.17% |
Source: Micron Technology
Who are Micron's biggest executive shareholders?
Executives and directors, including CEO Sanjay Mehrotra, collectively own 2.6 million shares - less than a 1% stake altogether.
| Executive or Director | Role at Micron | Shares owned |
|---|---|---|
| Chief Executive Officer, Chairman, President |
|
| Executive Vice President, Global Operations |
|
| Executive Vice President, Chief Business Officer |
|
| Chief Financial Officer |
|
| Executive Vice President, Chief Technology and Product Officer |
|
| Director |
|
T. Mark Liu | Director | 25,910 shares |
| Director |
|
| Director |
|
| Director |
|
| Lead Independent Director |
|
| Director |
|
| Director |
|
| Director |
|
Source: Micron Technology
Share count based on all current directors and executive officers as a group (14 persons) as of Micron's 2025 proxy statement, except for T. Mark Liu, who purchased 23,200 additional shares since the proxy statement was released.
Mehrotra has been Micron's President and CEO since 2017. Prior to that, he was the CEO at SanDisk. Mehrotra owns 1,084,078 shares and, according to Forbes, has a 2026 net worth of $1.2 billion.
Manish Bhatia, Micron's second-largest executive shareholder, is the company's executive vice president of global operations. He owns a total of 350,109 shares.
Micron's third-largest executive shareholder is Sumit Sadana, the company's chief business officer. He owns 277,521 shares.
Who originally owned Micron?
Design engineers Ward Parkinson, Dennis Wilson, and Doug Pitman teamed up with Ward's twin brother, Joe, who was an attorney, to found Micron Technology in 1978.
The men had one goal: to produce more efficient, denser, and faster Dynamic Random Access Memory (DRAM) chips.
By 1981, Micron's founders had their design, but they needed the capital to scale their manufacturing. After securing $300,000 in investments from a few local businessmen, they reached out to J.R. Simplot, a colorful character and local billionaire who made his fortune supplying McDonald's with its frozen french fries.
Simplot knew nothing about computers, but he did understand business, and after hearing their story, he became convinced that Micron could produce the highest-quality chips at the lowest possible cost. He invested $1 million into the company for a 40% stake, saying, "We're going to make some millionaires out here in the sagebrush."
More on tech company ownership:
- Who owns IBM? Top insiders & institutional shareholders
- Who owns Nvidia? Top insiders & institutional investors
- Who owns Salesforce in 2026? A look at its largest shareholders & leadership stake
By 1981, Micron's 64K DRAM chip was built into the Commodore 64 home computer. IBM and Apple would soon follow, and within ten years, Simplot's investment would be worth $4 billion.
However, Simplot sold off the bulk of his holdings throughout the 90s to fund his agribusiness and later died at age 99 in 2008. Today, his family no longer owns any Micron shares.
Micron's stock performance
Micron went public on June 1, 1984, at $13 per share. According to Yahoo! Finance, a $1,000 investment during the company's IPO would have been worth $414,500 as of April 2026.
Related: Micron Technology's stock buybacks explained
The Arena Media Brands, LLC THESTREET is a registered trademark of TheStreet, Inc.
This story was originally published July 1, 2026 at 8:12 AM.