Artificial intelligence (AI) stocks delivered another year of impressive returns to investors in 2025, as is evident from the 30% jump in the Global X Artificial Intelligence & Technology ETF — the largest AI-focused exchange-traded fund.
The sector did well despite starting 2025 on the back foot for reasons that included President Donald Trump’s tariff-induced trade wars and concerns about the huge amounts of money being spent on AI infrastructure. Those concerns were amplified after Chinese tech startup DeepSeek claimed that it had been able to train its large language model for a fraction of what the likes of OpenAI have been spending.
Following their remarkable surges over the past year, most of the top AI stocks — names like Nvidia, Palantir, Broadcom, and Snowflake — are trading at expensive sales multiples, lofty earnings multiples, or both. However, there is one AI stock that can be bought at an incredibly cheap valuation right now, despite having risen 250% in the past year — Micron Technology (NASDAQ: MU).
Here’s why this semiconductor company could be the biggest bargain buy of 2026.
For a company that reported a 57% year-over-year increase in revenue and a 167% increase in non-GAAP (adjusted) earnings in its latest quarter, a trailing earnings multiple of 27 is a massive bargain. Even better, Micron anticipates that in the current quarter, its top line will jump by 132% year over year to $18.7 billion, and its adjusted earnings will jump more than fivefold.
Therefore, Micron’s valuation suggests that the market has not yet fully priced its growth potential into the stock. Consensus estimates are projecting its earnings will increase nearly fourfold in its next fiscal year to $32.14 per share. Not surprisingly, Micron has a forward earnings multiple of just 9, well below the tech-laden Nasdaq-100 index’s forward price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio of 26.
If the market decides to reward Micron with a higher multiple and it trades at a forward P/E in line with the Nasdaq-100’s average after a year, its stock price could shoot up remarkably. More importantly, Micron is indeed capable of hitting Wall Street’s earnings expectations.
Demand for memory chips is far outstripping supply. A significant chunk of the available high-bandwidth memory production is being deployed in AI accelerator chips such as graphics processing units. As a result, there is a shortage of the memory chips used in smartphones and personal computers. This shortage has driven a massive increase in memory prices.
Story Continues











