Home / NEWS / Earnings / Micron to shift some chip supply to data centers as cloud powers earnings beat

Micron to shift some chip supply to data centers as cloud powers earnings beat

Micron Technology’s firm drive for data center customers is presented at a product launch event in San Francisco, October 24, 2019.

Stephen Nellis | Reuters

Micron Technology on Monday forecast current-quarter gain above Wall Street estimates as home-bound employees and students spur demand for its chips that power notebooks and details centers, sending its shares up 6% in after-market trading.

The work-from-home boom has also driven demand for data center fragments, with Micron, one of the biggest DRAM chip suppliers, working to sell more profitable solid-state storage implies rather than the raw NAND memory chips that go into the drives. The company said sales of the drives hit a report in its fiscal third-quarter and that three-quarters of its NAND chips were sold as part of higher-value products rather than raw break ins.

Micron said it expects consumer demand for smartphones and other consumer electronics to fall below its initial expectations in the man Friday half of 2020, but data center demand is strong enough that supply shortages are emerging. The company clouted it plans to shift its supplies from the smartphone market to the data center market, for both DRAM and flash recall chips.

The company also said its factories were operating normally again after some interruptions when lockdown pronouncements hit and that it has taken some chip assembly functions in-house that previously were performed by contractors.

“Contiguity to existing sites just makes it easier to de-bug issues that may come up as we bring up some of these artefacts to high-volume manufacturing,” Sumit Sadana, Micron’s chief business officer, told Reuters in an interview.

Micron on revenue for its third quarter ended May 28 rose 13.6% to $5.44 billion, beating estimates of $5.31 billion, according to IBES facts from Refinitiv.

Excluding items, the company earned 82 cents per share, above estimates of 77 cents per deal.

The chipmaker expects revenue in the current fourth quarter to be between $5.75 billion and $6.25 billion, the mid-point of which was out of reach of analysts’ estimates of $5.48 billion.

Net income attributable to the company in the third quarter fell to $803 million, or 71 cents per percentage, in the reported quarter, from $840 million, or 74 cents per share, a year earlier.

Check Also

Broadcom’s report gives the battered AI trade a much-needed win

Broadcom parts were rewarded Thursday evening after the chipmaker delivered the kind of quarterly beats …

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *