Micron (NASDAQ: MU) stock saw its biggest insider trade of 2026 when, on June 26, CEO Sanjay Mehrotra sold 4,000 MU shares, raising a total of just over $46 million.
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This signal is triggered upon the reporting of the trade to the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC).
Additionally, the sale featured so many individual, smaller components that the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) limitation of up to 30 ‘line-items’ means that it required two FORM 4 documents.
Thus, the first filing shows that the CEO dumped 28,506 Micron shares at an average price of $1,149 for a total of $32.76 million. The second document reveals that an additional 11,494 MU shares were sold at a slightly higher average price of $1,181, raising a total of $13.57 million.
Notably, while CEO Mehrotra is the company’s most prolific insider trader, the sales executed on June 26 and reported on June 30 eclipse all his previous activity in 2026.
Indeed, he made two stock dumps in May – worth roughly $21 million toward the beginning and $38.5 million toward the end of the month – and his other most recent selling was done as far back at November 2025 and raised a total of $3 million.
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This signal is triggered upon the reporting of the trade to the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC).
What is next for Micron stock in 2026?
Elsewhere, at least part of the rise in the size of insider trades can be linked directly to Micron stock’s performance in 2026. Specifically, after starting the year at $315.42and stagnating during the first quarter (Q1), MU experienced a rapid Q2 upsurge.
Indeed, the memory giant ended the most recent session – July 1 – at $1,032.28 for a 227.27% rally from the January 2 closing price.

Still, the success has suddenly come under threat in the most recent 24 hours due to the implied bearish signal coming from Meta Platforms (NASDAQ: META).
In a nutshell, Mark Zuckerberg’s company joined SpaceX (NASDAQ: SPCX) in offering some of its artificial intelligence (AI) data center capacity to other businesses.
Though the move could help Meta raise additional cash and offset some of its rising expenditure, it implies that despite data center construction severely lagging relative to the initial announcements – at least as far as can be judged from publicly available information – there exists a gap between supply and demand.
Much of Micron stock’s Q2 rally was driven by the AI boom narrative and the company’s decision to abandon the consumer market in favor of ‘hyperscalers.’
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