Micron Technology has signed 16 multi-year strategic customer agreements expected to provide $22 billion in cash deposits and related financial commitments, giving the US memory-chip manufacturer greater visibility over demand as artificial intelligence drives pressure on global supply.
The agreements cover customers across data centers, consumer technology and automotive markets. Most run for five years, from 2026 until the end of 2030, while automotive agreements generally carry three-year terms.
Micron said 14 of the signed agreements represent approximately $100 billion of minimum contracted revenue over their remaining terms. Around $18 billion of the $22 billion in deposits and related commitments is expected to be provided in cash.
The contracts use take-or-pay structures that bind customers to purchasing agreed volumes. Larger agreements generally include price floors and ceilings, while a smaller proportion use fixed prices or pricing linked to market conditions. Price floors are intended to protect Micron’s margins when memory markets weaken, while customers receive greater certainty over the supply and cost of components needed for their own products and infrastructure. The structure reduces some of the exposure traditionally associated with the semiconductor industry’s severe pricing and inventory cycles. The 16 agreements cover approximately 20% of Micron’s DRAM volume and one-third of its NAND volume over the contract period. Four involve what the company described as very large customers, three relate to medium-sized customers and the remaining agreements cover smaller automotive businesses. Customer identities were not disclosed.
Micron expects at least half of its revenue eventually to be covered by strategic customer agreements once its targeted program is completed. Such a shift would alter the company’s commercial model considerably, replacing a larger proportion of short-term orders with contracted volumes and longer-term customer commitments.
The cash deposits do not represent immediate revenue or free cash flow. Chief financial officer Mark Murphy said the money will appear on Micron’s balance sheet, with much of the increase expected during its fiscal fourth quarter. The deposits will be returned to customers over time, mainly during the later stages of the agreements, as purchases are completed.
The structure still gives Micron additional financial support while it expands production capacity. Memory manufacturing plants require substantial spending and long development periods, while construction, permitting, specialist labor and energy infrastructure can restrict the speed at which new supply enters the market.
Chairman, president and chief executive Sanjay Mehrotra said artificial intelligence has elevated memory from a standard component into a strategic resource for customers. Micron expects demand to continue exceeding industry supply beyond 2027 as data centers require more high-bandwidth memory, DRAM and storage capacity.
The agreements were announced alongside record results for Micron’s fiscal third quarter, which ended on May 28, 2026. Revenue reached $41.46 billion, up from $23.86 billion in the previous quarter and $9.3 billion during the comparable period a year earlier.
Data-center revenue exceeded $25 billion during the quarter, while Micron forecast fourth-quarter revenue of approximately $50 billion, subject to a $1 billion range. The company spent $7.1 billion on capital expenditure during the third quarter as it continued investing in technology, manufacturing and advanced packaging.
Longer-term contracts should improve planning across Micron’s factories and give management greater confidence when committing capital to new capacity. They also transfer part of the supply risk to customers, which must commit funds and volumes well before every component is delivered. Micron must still execute its manufacturing plans, maintain technology leadership and meet the contracted supply requirements. Customer deposits provide financial backing, but the expected revenue and margin gains depend on successful production across a period when semiconductor capacity, equipment and skilled labor remain constrained.
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