Applied Materials and Micron are partners in memory. Is AMAT or MU stock the better buy here?


Applied Materials (AMAT) and Micron Technologies (MU) have partnered to develop next-generation memory chips specifically for artificial intelligence. The collaboration focuses on DRAM and high-bandwidth memory (HBM) to meet the huge speed and power needs of modern AI systems. By combining applied materials engineering with Micron’s memory expertise, the companies aim to create a “lab-to-fab” pipeline that moves new designs faster from research to mass production.

The partnership centers on two major US centers: the new $5 billion EPIC Center for Applied Materials in Silicon Valley and Micron’s Innovation Center in Boise, Idaho. A key focus is advanced packaging, a technique that stores chip components to increase performance while reducing energy consumption. As AI models grow more complex, this alliance ensures that core hardware can scale efficiently, strengthening the US as a leader in the semiconductor innovation needed to unlock AI’s full potential.

Applied Materials is a leading provider of equipment, services and software for the manufacturing of semiconductors, displays and solar products. It provides critical tools for chip manufacturing, such as deposition, etching, and inspection systems, powering virtually every new semiconductor used in electronics, AI, smartphones, and high-performance computing.

Founded in 1967 and headquartered in Santa Clara, California, USA, Applied Materials operates globally with facilities, R&D, and sales in over 100 countries.

Applied materials have shown explosive growth in the past year, fueled by rapid demand for artificial intelligence and high-bandwidth memory. The stock has rallied an impressive 138% over the past 52 weeks, after hitting a one-year high of $395.95.

Short-term indicators show some recent volatility, as the stock experienced a 2% drop over the five-day period but has seen a 3% gain over the past month, with investors weighing record earnings against geopolitical risks.

www.barchart.com
www.barchart.com

Applied Materials delivered a strong performance for Q1 2026, posting revenue of $7.01 billion and non-GAAP EPS of $2.38. Both figures exceeded analyst estimates of $6.87 billion and $2.21 billion, respectively, driven largely by record-breaking DRAM revenue and an 11% increase in AI-related demand.

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