If you had put Micron Technology on your watchlist a year ago and then gone on a very long vacation, you would have returned to a genuinely shocking brokerage statement. The chipmaker’s stock has surged nearly 700% over the past year, with shares climbing past the $1,000 mark by early July 2026, fueled almost entirely by one thing: the world’s insatiable appetite for artificial intelligence memory chips.
Why Micron is having its moment
The company’s high-bandwidth memory products, specifically its HBM3E chips and the next-generation HBM4, have become essential plumbing for AI accelerators like Nvidia’s GPUs. Without HBM, large language models cannot process data fast enough to be useful at scale.
Micron’s fiscal Q3 2026 earnings made that scarcity very clear. Net income surged roughly 15-fold year-over-year. Management also confirmed that the company’s entire 2026 HBM supply is already sold out, including both current-generation and next-gen products. That means every chip Micron plans to produce this year already has a buyer’s name on it.
The stock split question
Micron’s last split was a 2-for-1 in May 2000. The company has not split its stock since, which means more than two decades of price appreciation have been baked into a single share.
Company management has not signaled any intention to pursue a split. Apple split its stock four times. Nvidia executed a 10-for-1 split in 2024 after a similarly dramatic run.
Where crypto comes in
Ondo Finance, a tokenized real-world asset protocol, has launched a product called MUon on the Ethereum blockchain. The token is designed to give holders economic exposure to Micron shares without requiring them to open a brokerage account, deal with settlement windows, or navigate traditional equity markets.
In practice, MUon holders do not own Micron stock directly. They hold a tokenized representation that tracks the share’s performance. The distinction matters legally and structurally, but for someone sitting in a country with limited access to US equity markets, the practical effect is similar to owning a slice of MU.
What this means for investors watching both markets
For crypto-native investors, MUon represents a growing class of products that blur the line between equity investing and on-chain trading. The ability to get exposure to a Nasdaq-listed semiconductor company through an Ethereum wallet is either a genuinely useful financial primitive or a regulatory grey area waiting for clarity, depending on your jurisdiction and your lawyer.
Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

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