Home StockMicron stock: why attack on Qatar’s energy facility is bearish for it

Micron stock: why attack on Qatar’s energy facility is bearish for it

by admin

Micron Technology (MU) slipped notably after market close on March 18, even though the memory chips specialist posted a blowout quarter featuring a nearly 200% year-on-year increase in revenue to $23.86 billion.

And while this weakness is being attributed primarily to the firm’s warning that capex will step up “meaningfully” this year, part of it is actually related to an attack on Qatar’s energy infrastructure, specifically the Ras Laffan industrial complex, amidst continued escalations between the US and Iran.

While Qatar is known predominantly for Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG), its role as a “linchpin” in the global helium supply chain is what makes the attack a direct bearish catalyst for Micron stock.

Significance of Qatar’s energy sector for Micron stock

Contrary to popular belief, helium isn’t just for balloons; it’s a “critical” industrial gas used to cool silicon wafers during the fabrication process and to maintain the ultra-clean environments required for lithography.

As of writing, Qatar accounts for roughly one-third of the world’s helium production, and there’s no viable chemical substitute for helium – a byproduct of natural gas extraction – in semiconductor manufacturing.

Typically, most chipmakers maintain roughly two to six weeks of helium inventory.

But with the Ras Laffan complex now offline, the industry is entering a “critical window” where supply shortages could force production slowdowns.

It’s this fear that’s contributing to pressure on MU shares in after-hours.

A potential hit to margins could hurt MU shares in 2026

What’s also worth mentioning is that shifting helium supply from Qatar to the US or Australia isn’t a viable alternative either because the financial impact of the Ras Laffan incident is twofold.

For starters, industry experts believe spot helium prices could as much as “triple” as a result of the aforementioned attack, which in itself is a major risk for the semiconductor space.

Additionally, however, since fabrication is incredibly energy-intensive, the broader spike in global LNG prices lifts the cost of electricity and logistics, squeeing margins just as MU was scaling high cost HBM3E production for AI.

The timing of this attack creates a “perfect storm” for Micron’s balance sheet, given it just warned of a more than $10 billion increase in construction-related costs in its fiscal 2027.

In short, the compounding cost structure threatens to derail Micron shares, as the dual pressures of soaring raw material expenses and inflated utility overheads erode the expected returns from their next-gen memory chips.

How Wall Street recommends playing Micron Technology

Despite a blockbuster Q4 release, Wall Street firms also seem to believe that MU’s stock price rally has gone a bit too far in 2026.

While the consensus rating on Micron sits at “strong buy”, the mean target of about $387 suggests potential “downside” of another 13% from here.

The post Micron stock: why attack on Qatar's energy facility is bearish for it appeared first on Invezz

You may also like