Menu

Micron Shows Resilience Across Q4 2022 and Full Year Fiscal 2022 Results

The News: Micron Technology, Inc (Nasdaq: MU) announced results for its fourth (Q4) and full year (FY) of fiscal 2022, which ended September 1, 2022. Fiscal Q4 highlights include revenue of $6.64 billion versus $8.64 billion for the prior quarter and $8.27 billion for the same period last year. Fiscal 2022 highlights include revenue of $30.76 billion versus $27.71 billion for the prior year Read the Micron Press Release here.

Micron Shows Resilience Across Q4 2022 and Full Year Fiscal 2022 Results

Analyst Take: Micron reported its Q4 2022 and FY 2022 results of fiscal 2022. Micron’s Q4 2022 financial results were impacted by rapidly weakening consumer demand and significant customer inventory adjustments across all its end markets. From our view, Micron is responding determinedly to this weak environment by decreasing supply growth through significant cuts to fiscal 2023 capex and by reducing utilization across the company’s fabs.

Micron Q4 2022 highlights included:

  • Revenue of $6.64B versus $8.64B for the prior quarter and $8.27B for the same period last year
  • GAAP net income of $1.49B, or $1.35 per diluted share
  • Non-GAAP net income of $1.62B, or $1.45 per diluted share
  • Operating cash flow of $3.78B versus $3.84B for the prior quarter and $3.88B for the same period last year

In contrast, across FY 2022 Micron delivered record annual revenue in fiscal year 2022 with solid profitability and free cash flow despite a challenging environment in the latter part of the year. Also, the company ramped up its 1-alpha DRAM and 176-layer NAND nodes across its portfolio and returned a record amount of cash to shareholders. Moreover, it attained record revenue in mobile, auto, industrial, and networking end markets as well as registered share gains in client and data center SSDs which contributed to record revenue in SSDs as well as in its consolidated NAND business.

Micron Fiscal 2022 highlights included:

  • Revenue of $30.76B versus $27.71B for the prior year
  • GAAP net income of $8.69B, or $7.75 per diluted share
  • Non-GAAP net income of $9.48B, or $8.35 per diluted share
  • Operating cash flow of $15.18B versus $12.47Bs for the prior year

On the positive side, we believe Micron’s August warning helped soften the impact of the Q4 2022 and fiscal 2022 results. After six years of cash flow positive, Micron is facing industry-wide headwinds, however we see the company’s cost discipline as providing critical buffer to endure looming inventory and demand-side uncertainties.

Plus, Micron will receive up to $320 million in Japanese government subsidies, marking the first of an expected series of deals to fortify supply chains against the disruptive threat from China. The move follows on Micron’s announced plans in August to increase its chip production in the U.S., boosted by the passage of the CHIPS Act. Currently, most of Micron’s chip production — akin to many other semiconductor companies — happens in Asia. Micron announced that production would likely begin in 2025 and can ultimately bring 40,000 jobs to the U.S. economy. We anticipate that Micron will remain steadfast to its strategic vision while making the necessary adjustments to handle near-term market corrections.

Micron Q4 2022 Guidance Perspective and 2023 Outlook

Of concern, Micron revenue came in below the low end of guidance in accordance with its August pre-Q4 forecast announcement warning of a negative free cash flow due to customer inventory backups amid diminishing demand for chips used in PCs and smartphones. As such, Q4 revenues came in below the low end of guidance at $6.6 billion. Except for the automotive segment, all the other end markets declined quarter-over-quarter and year-over-year.

For fiscal year, 2023 Micron capital expenditures (CapEx) is pegged to decline 33 percent to $8 billion. These figures align with Micron’s declaration that the semiconductor industry is entering its most substantial downturn since the Great Recession of 2008-09 and possibly since 2001 given the expectation of a recession coupled with inflationary pressure (i.e., stagflation) and inventory build.

As a result, Micron plans to slash spending on new chipmaking build by 50% to address the significant virtually unparalleled oversupply situation. We view Micron’s performance as not unique and aligning with the most recent financial reporting of top-tier chipmakers such as Intel, NVIDIA, and AMD and may portend a trend of softer post-pandemic demand for chips supporting consumer products such as smartphones and PCs.

Key Takeaways on Micron’s Q4 2022 and FY 2022 Results

In fiscal 2022, to its credit the company generated record revenue of $30.8 billion and returned a record $2.9 billion to shareholders. From our view, Micron’s robust presence in the DRAM and NAND market segments, portfolio versatility, and robust balance sheet can enable the company to steer through the languishing near-term supply-demand environment until macroeconomic and semiconductor segment conditions improve.

Disclosure: Futurum Research is a research and advisory firm that engages or has engaged in research, analysis, and advisory services with many technology companies, including those mentioned in this article. The author does not hold any equity positions with any company mentioned in this article.

Analysis and opinions expressed herein are specific to the analyst individually and data and other information that might have been provided for validation, not those of Futurum Research as a whole.

Other insights from Futurum Research:

Micron to Invest $40 Billion in U.S. Chip Manufacturing with Boost from CHIPS and Science Act

Embedded World 2022: Micron Unfolds Compute Foundation Innovations for Accelerating Intelligent Industrial and Automotive Edge

Micron Investor Day 2022: A Promising Look into the Growth of Memory and Storage

Image Credit: Nasdaq

Author Information

Ron is an experienced, customer-focused research expert and analyst, with over 20 years of experience in the digital and IT transformation markets, working with businesses to drive consistent revenue and sales growth.

Ron holds a Master of Arts in Public Policy from University of Nevada — Las Vegas and a Bachelor of Arts in political science/government from William and Mary.

Related Insights
LevelBlue–SentinelOne Partnership: Does Unified Security Improve Outcomes?
April 1, 2026

LevelBlue–SentinelOne Partnership: Does Unified Security Improve Outcomes?

Fernando Montenegro, VP & Practice Lead for Cybersecurity & Resilience at Futurum, analyzes the LevelBlue SentinelOne partnership and its focus on integrating threat intelligence, AI detection, and response to improve...
Snowflake's SnowWork Targets the Gap Between Data Insight and Business Action
March 25, 2026

Snowflake’s SnowWork Targets the Gap Between Data Insight and Business Action

Brad Shimmin and Nick Patience explore Snowflake’s Project SnowWork and how the Agentic Enterprise Control Plane turns the AI Data Cloud into a "system of action" for autonomous workflows across...
Mistral Forge Takes Aim at RAG. But Who Actually Needs Custom Models
March 25, 2026

Mistral Forge Takes Aim at RAG. But Who Actually Needs Custom Models?

Nick Patience, AI Platforms Practice Lead at Futurum, examines Mistral Forge, a custom enterprise AI model training platform, and argues that while its approach is sound, the addressable market may...
Oracle Positions AI Database 26ai to Lead $1.2 Trillion Market by Bridging the Agentic Reasoning Gap
March 25, 2026

Oracle Positions AI Database 26ai to Lead $1.2 Trillion Market by Bridging the Agentic Reasoning Gap

Brad Shimmin and Keith Kirkpatrick of Futurum explore Oracle's pivot to agentic plumbing. Oracle is embedding autonomous reasoning directly into Oracle AI Database 26ai to solve the enterprise data latency...
Does NVIDIA’s Physical AI Gambit with T-Mobile Redraw the Edge Compute Map
March 23, 2026

Does NVIDIA’s Physical AI Gambit with T-Mobile Redraw the Edge Compute Map?

Tom Hollingsworth, Research Director at Futurum, examines how NVIDIA and T-Mobile are shifting AI from the cloud to the network edge, embedding intelligence directly into 5G networks to accelerate enterprise...
Acer’s FY 2025 Results Signal Value Proposition Evolution Ahead of 2026 Headwinds
March 20, 2026

Acer’s FY 2025 Results Signal Value Proposition Evolution Ahead of 2026 Headwinds

Olivier Blanchard, Research Director & Practice Lead, Intelligent Devices at Futurum, examines Acer’s FY 2025 results and multi-engine strategy signal as PCs face potential 2026 headwinds and the company expands...

Book a Demo

Newsletter Sign-up Form

Get important insights straight to your inbox, receive first looks at eBooks, exclusive event invitations, custom content, and more. We promise not to spam you or sell your name to anyone. You can always unsubscribe at any time.

All fields are required






Thank you, we received your request, a member of our team will be in contact with you.