Micron validates CXMT and YMTC growth amid record AI memory demand

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Micron validates CXMT and YMTC growth amid record AI memory demand

Synopsis

Micron's chief business officer publicly confirmed that China's CXMT and YMTC have grown in both capability and market share — a rare global validation for Beijing's chipmakers — even as Micron posted record revenue of US$41.46 billion and guided for a US$50 billion quarter on the back of relentless AI memory demand.

Key Takeaways

Micron Technology reported fiscal Q3 revenue of US$41.46 billion , up from US$9.30 billion a year earlier, beating market expectations.
Micron guided for record fiscal Q4 revenue of US$50 billion ± US$1 billion and signed 16 strategic customer agreements .
Chief business officer Sumit Sadana acknowledged that CXMT and YMTC 'had grown in capability and market share over the years,' though the 'overwhelming majority' of their sales remain within China .
CEO Sanjay Mehrotra warned that tight memory supply conditions are expected to 'persist beyond calendar 2027 ' due to AI -driven demand and structural supply constraints.
Micron competes in the HBM segment with SK Hynix and Samsung Electronics ; neither CXMT nor YMTC has yet established a meaningful HBM presence.

Micron Technology, one of the world's three dominant high-bandwidth memory (HBM) suppliers, has publicly acknowledged the rising capabilities and market share of China's top memory chipmakers — ChangXin Memory Technologies (CXMT) and Yangtze Memory Technologies Corp (YMTC) — even as the US firm posted record quarterly results driven by surging AI infrastructure demand.

Micron's record quarter sets the stage

Micron reported fiscal third-quarter revenue of US$41.46 billion, up sharply from US$23.86 billion in the prior quarter and US$9.30 billion a year earlier, beating market expectations. The company issued guidance for a record fiscal fourth-quarter revenue of US$50 billion, plus or minus US$1 billion, and disclosed it had signed 16 strategic customer agreements intended to improve long-term demand visibility. The results eased investor concerns about a potential AI spending bubble.

Why it matters: China's chipmakers get global validation

During the earnings call on Wednesday, 25 June 2026, Micron chief business officer Sumit Sadana addressed direct questions about competitive pressure from CXMT and YMTC. Sadana said both companies 'had grown in capability and market share over the years,' though he noted the 'overwhelming majority' of their output was still sold within China. The acknowledgement from a top-three global memory supplier carries significant weight for mainland China's semiconductor industry, which has faced sustained US export restrictions.

The competitive backdrop: HBM and the AI memory race

Micron competes in the HBM segment alongside South Korea's SK Hynix and Samsung Electronics — a trio that currently controls the global supply of the advanced memory chips powering AI accelerators including those from Nvidia. CXMT has been expanding its DRAM footprint, while YMTC has made inroads in NAND flash storage, according to industry analysts at firms including TrendForce, SemiAnalysis, Bernstein, and Counterpoint. Both Chinese firms remain concentrated in their domestic market but have been steadily closing the technology gap.

Supply constraints to persist past 2027

Micron chief executive Sanjay Mehrotra said in prepared remarks: 'We expect tight conditions to persist beyond calendar 2027 as a result of AI-driven demand across all segments coupled with structural supply constraints.' The statement underscores how the memory market — historically prone to oversupply cycles — is being reshaped by the capital intensity of AI infrastructure buildouts. Micron's forward guidance suggests the current upcycle has more runway than many analysts had anticipated.

What's next

The key question for the global memory market is whether CXMT and YMTC can translate domestic scale into international competitiveness, particularly in advanced HBM — a segment where neither has yet established a meaningful presence. With Micron projecting supply tightness well into 2028 and beyond, any acceleration in Chinese chipmakers' technological readiness could alter the competitive calculus for the incumbent trio. Investors and policymakers in both Washington and Beijing will be watching closely.

Point of View

China loses.' The reality, as Micron's own executive framed it, is that Chinese memory makers are advancing within a protected domestic market that is large enough to fund continued R&D at scale. What the results also reveal is a structural tension: Micron's record guidance depends on supply remaining tight, yet any meaningful breakthrough by CXMT in DRAM — or YMTC in NAND — could accelerate oversupply precisely when Western chipmakers are most exposed on capex. The HBM frontier remains the critical moat for now, but the window for the incumbent trio to consolidate that advantage is narrowing.
NationPress
25 Jun 2026

Frequently Asked Questions

What did Micron say about China's CXMT and YMTC?
Micron chief business officer Sumit Sadana said during a 25 June 2026 earnings call that both CXMT and YMTC 'had grown in capability and market share over the years,' while noting the 'overwhelming majority' of their output is still sold within China . It marks one of the most direct public validations of Chinese memory chipmakers by a top-three global supplier.
What were Micron's Q3 2026 earnings results?
Micron Technology reported fiscal third-quarter revenue of US$41.46 billion , up from US$23.86 billion in the previous quarter and US$9.30 billion a year earlier, beating analyst expectations. The company also guided for a record fiscal fourth-quarter revenue of US$50 billion ± US$1 billion .
Why is the memory chip market so tight in 2026?
CEO Sanjay Mehrotra attributed the tightness to 'AI-driven demand across all segments coupled with structural supply constraints,' and said these conditions are expected to persist 'beyond calendar 2027 .' The rapid expansion of AI infrastructure — which relies heavily on HBM and DRAM — has fundamentally altered demand patterns in a market historically prone to oversupply cycles.
Who are the main competitors in the HBM memory market?
The global HBM market is currently dominated by three suppliers: SK Hynix and Samsung Electronics of South Korea , and Micron Technology of the US . Neither CXMT nor YMTC has yet established a significant HBM presence, though both are expanding in DRAM and NAND flash respectively.
How does CXMT and YMTC growth affect global chip supply?
As long as CXMT and YMTC sell the 'overwhelming majority' of output domestically, the immediate impact on global supply is limited. However, analysts at TrendForce , SemiAnalysis , and Bernstein have noted that continued technology advancement by both firms could eventually introduce new supply into international markets, potentially disrupting the tight conditions that currently benefit Micron , SK Hynix , and Samsung .
Nation Press
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