Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

Stock

Micron stock sinks after big rally: why profit-taking is hitting now

Micron stock (NASDAQ: MU) fell more than 3.5% on Tuesday after a blistering rally that saw the stock more than double from its November low.

The pullback reflects classic profit-taking after a steep run, combined with unusual options activity and investor concerns about very large capital-spending commitments.

The stock now trades below the $425 level, down from intraday highs of $455 logged just days earlier, leaving traders to digest both the near-term technical setup and the longer-term implications of Micron’s aggressive expansion plans.

The behavioral backdrop is straightforward: after climbing 114% in just over two months from a November 20th low of $201.37, Micron stock has triggered the mechanical selling patterns.

The share price now trades 147% above its 200-day moving average.

As the momentum cools, the money managers rebalance portfolios, retail traders lock profits, and algorithmic traders trim, contributing to the downward pressure.

Micron stock: Options hedging and dealer-driven selling

The pullback has been amplified by unusual put option activity.

Barchart’s options data reveals over 10,000 put contracts traded at the $390 strike (expiring May 15, 2026), representing 75 times the prior open interest and suggesting traders are bracing for a pullback.

When a large spike in put buying occurs after a stock’s massive run, market makers hedge their short-put exposure by selling shares, creating a mechanical feedback loop that pressures prices further.

The implied volatility of these puts stands at 70%, an extreme level that reflects investor anxiety.

Buyers are paying steep premiums ($44.33 per contract) for the downside protection, signaling concern that Micron’s run has disconnected from near-term fundamentals.

Meanwhile, short-sellers of these puts are collecting income premiums of over 11% over 107 days, a yield that reflects how skittish options traders have become.

Capex concerns and valuation repricing

The $24 billion Singapore fab announcement sounds great as a long-term strategy, but unsettles near-term math.

New production doesn’t commence until late 2028, yet Micron raised fiscal 2026 capex to $20 billion, plus another $7 billion for high-bandwidth memory facilities.

The investors are now pausing to calculate the cash flow impact and whether near-term margin expansion can sustain valuations once capex surges.

Analysts’ average price target sits around $356–$433, below current levels for some surveys.

After a 373% one-year gain and with Micron trading at 41.46x forward earnings (a premium to historical ranges), the stock is vulnerable to guidance misses or margin pressure.

Near-term support sits at $407–$410 (the intraday low on February 3). If the stock closes below $400, technical sellers will likely emerge.

Conversely, a close above $440 could reignite momentum into the earnings date. The key catalyst remains execution: whether Micron’s capex can build capacity that keeps competitors at bay through 2027.

The post Micron stock sinks after big rally: why profit-taking is hitting now appeared first on Invezz

You May Also Like

Politics

Gold prices rose to a two-week high and were on track for a fourth consecutive monthly high on rising bets that the US Federal...

Stock

The Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) reported Tuesday that core wholesale prices rose less than anticipated in September, suggesting a possible moderation in pipeline...

Politics

Global technology, geopolitical tensions, and economic market shifts dominated the news cycle as developments unfolded across AI, international security, and financial markets. OpenAI is...

Stock

BlackRock’s spot bitcoin exchange-traded fund is experiencing its worst month on record, mirroring the steepest decline in the price of bitcoin in more than...