Wall Street's main indices opened higher Wednesday as investors rotated back into technology stocks, snapping two consecutive sessions of losses driven by AI spending concerns and interest rate uncertainty, with all eyes on Micron Technology's earnings due after the close.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 0.8% in early trading, while the S&P 500 gained 1.2% and the Nasdaq Composite climbed 1.8%, recovering some of the ground lost in Monday and Tuesday's selloff that erased more than $1 trillion in market value from the tech-heavy index.
"The market is pricing in a strong print from Micron, and the pre-positioning we saw earlier this week created an entry point for investors who missed the memory rally," said Sarah Lin, equity strategist at Edgen. "The question is whether guidance can justify the valuation after a 13% single-day drop in Micron shares on Tuesday."
Tuesday's selloff was led by semiconductor and memory names after a South Korea-led rout hit SK Hynix and Samsung Electronics, spilling into U.S. markets. Micron Technology closed at $1,051.77 on Tuesday, down 13.2%, after touching an all-time high of $1,213.56 just a day earlier. The S&P 500 fell 1.4% to 7,365.46 on Tuesday, while the Nasdaq dropped 2.2% to 25,587, its worst single-day decline in three weeks.
Micron Earnings Set the Tone
Micron is scheduled to report fiscal third-quarter results after Wednesday's closing bell. Analysts expect the Boise, Idaho-based memory-chip maker to post adjusted earnings of $20.76 a share on revenue of $35.75 billion, according to FactSet estimates. That would represent year-over-year growth of 987% in earnings and 284% in revenue, driven by insatiable demand for high-bandwidth memory used in AI data centers.
The company has signed multiple long-term supply agreements with strategic customers, including a five-year deal disclosed last quarter and a new strategic agreement with artificial intelligence company Anthropic announced Monday. Needham analyst Quinn Bolton reiterated his buy rating on Micron and raised his price target to $1,550 from $500, citing "stronger for longer" memory market fundamentals. Morgan Stanley's Joseph Moore rates the stock overweight with a $1,050 target.
The broader tech rebound Wednesday also lifted Nvidia, Advanced Micro Devices and other semiconductor names that had been swept up in the two-day selloff. The Philadelphia Semiconductor Index rose 2.5% in early trading.
What's at Stake
Wednesday's session represents a critical test for the AI trade, which has powered much of the S&P 500's gains this year. Micron's results and, more importantly, its forward guidance will signal whether memory demand from AI data centers can sustain the torrid growth pace that has pushed the company's market value past $1 trillion. A strong report could validate the rotation back into tech, while a miss risks reigniting the selloff that erased more than $200 billion from the semiconductor sector over the prior two sessions.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.