Micron reports record profitability as AI memory demand reshapes the compute landscape Micron Technology reported fiscal Q3 2026 revenue of $41.5 billion, a 346% increase year-over-year, driven by surging demand for AI memory chips. The company's record profitability highlights a growing competition for hardware resources between AI infrastructure and cryptocurrency mining, with HBM supplies fully allocated through 2026. Micron reports record profitability as AI memory demand reshapes the compute landscape The chipmaker's 346% revenue surge highlights a growing tug-of-war between AI infrastructure and crypto mining for hardware resources Micron Technology just posted the kind of quarter that makes CFOs weep tears of joy. The memory chipmaker reported fiscal Q3 2026 revenue of approximately $41.5 billion, a staggering 346% increase from $9.3 billion in the year-ago period. Net income hit $28.24 billion, and gross margins ballooned to roughly 85%. The numbers behind the boom The results, announced on June 24, paint a picture of a company riding the AI wave with near-perfect timing. Adjusted earnings per share came in at $25.11, and the stock responded with a 15% jump in after-hours trading. Perhaps more telling than the backward-looking numbers is what Micron sees ahead. The company issued guidance for Q4 FY2026 projecting revenue of approximately $50 billion. That would represent yet another sequential leap from Q3’s already record haul, and a massive step up from Q2’s $23.86 billion. The growth engine here is unmistakable: AI infrastructure. Demand for DRAM, high-bandwidth memory HBM , and NAND flash memory has exploded as hyperscalers and AI companies race to build out data centers capable of training and running increasingly sophisticated models. HBM supplies are fully allocated through the end of 2026, according to analyst assessments. The broader supply shortfall is expected to persist until 2028. The company also announced a strategic agreement with Anthropic around June 22, covering memory and storage supply alongside technical collaboration. Why crypto investors should pay attention AI and cryptocurrency mining share a fundamental dependency: they both consume enormous amounts of compute hardware and the memory that supports it. When AI demand absorbs every available chip, GPU, and memory module on the market, crypto miners face a squeeze. There’s also a more direct connection forming between traditional tech equities and crypto rails. The MUon token, a tokenized equity product representing Micron stock, has emerged as an investment vehicle enabling on-chain exposure to Micron’s performance for non-US investors. The bigger picture for markets For crypto markets specifically, the key variable to watch is whether AI’s hardware dominance starts to visibly constrain mining economics. Bitcoin miners have already been navigating tighter economics since the April 2024 halving. Adding a structural hardware shortage driven by AI demand into that equation creates an environment where only the most efficient operations survive. If more AI companies follow the Anthropic model with dedicated memory supply agreements, it effectively locks crypto miners out of an even larger portion of the supply chain. Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy https://cryptobriefing.com/editorial-policy/ .