In the context of continuously surging demand for AI computing power, NVIDIA's GTC 2026 conference has once again become a bellwether for the global semiconductor industry. The announcements made by memory giant Micron Technology (MU) at this major event have undoubtedly introduced new variables into the competition within the high-performance memory market. Micron not only officially confirmed the mass production of high-performance HBM4 memory for NVIDIA's next-generation Vera Rubin AI platform at the conference but also demonstrated its indispensable role in the computing supply chain ecosystem through the comprehensive rollout of its full-stack memory solutions. The newly mass-produced 36GB 12-Hi HBM4 memory from Micron achieves a remarkable bandwidth exceeding 2.8 TB/s and improves power efficiency by over 20% compared to the previous generation, which is crucial for addressing the "power wall" challenge in large-scale model training. Of significant interest to the market, Micron's management explicitly stated on-site that its HBM production capacity for the entire 2026 fiscal year is almost entirely sold out, with the vast majority of orders secured under legally binding long-term purchase agreements. This high level of order commitment signals a fundamental shift in the HBM market from traditional cyclical spot trading to a deeply integrated model based on customized technological collaboration. As the sole major US-based HBM supplier, Micron's strategic premium is accelerating. To maintain a lead in technological generations, Micron is not stopping at the mass production of 12-layer stacks. The company announced it has begun delivering samples of an even more disruptive 48GB 16-Hi HBM4 to key customers, offering a 33% increase in single-chip capacity compared to the current mass-produced version, aimed at providing greater memory headroom for subsequent upgrades of the Vera Rubin platform. Concurrently, Micron is actively advancing the development of the next-generation HBM4E, expected to enter the sampling phase in the second half of 2026. Beyond advancements in memory, the system-level storage synergy capabilities demonstrated by Micron during GTC are equally noteworthy. The industry's first PCIe 6.0 data center SSD to enter mass production, the Micron 9650, set a new industry record with sequential read speeds of 28 GB/s. Combined with the 192GB SOCAMM2 memory module designed specifically for the Vera CPU, Micron is building a comprehensive storage ecosystem covering GPU memory, system memory, and high-speed cache. This full-stack supply capability not only optimizes the overall operational efficiency of hyperscale systems like NVIDIA's NVL72 but also secures a broader voice for Micron in the high-performance computing market by enhancing the inference response speed of Agentic AI. From an industry competition perspective, Micron's high-profile announcement of mass production holds significant strategic importance. Early in 2026, market rumors suggested Micron was lagging behind SK Hynix and Samsung in HBM4 development, with some reports even indicating its market share would be taken by major competitors. However, Micron has effectively countered these doubts with tangible mass production and shipments, proving it has rejoined the industry's first-tier in advanced process and packaging technologies. Analysts point out that as HBM4 begins to contribute substantial revenue in fiscal 2026, Micron's gross margin and profitability are expected to see further improvement. The competition among the world's three major memory giants in the HBM4 arena has now intensified, and Micron's breakthrough with the NVIDIA Vera Rubin platform has given it a crucial first-mover advantage in the battle for future market allocation. "The next era of AI will be defined by deeply integrated platforms developed through joint engineering innovation across the entire ecosystem," emphasized Sumit Sadana, Executive Vice President and Chief Business Officer of Micron Technology. "Our close collaboration with NVIDIA ensures that compute and memory scale together from the design phase." He further added, "With the volume production of 36GB 12H HBM4, the industry's first SOCAMM2, and Gen6 SSDs, Micron is building the core infrastructure required to unleash the full potential of next-generation AI." At Tuesday's market close, Micron Technology's stock price rose 4.5%, and extended gains in after-hours trading, climbing an additional 2.21% to close at $471.97.