Micron Technology poured the first concrete Monday at its Clay, New York manufacturing site, marking the start of construction on what will become the largest semiconductor fabrication plant in United States history. The $3 billion anchor investment lands as the opening tranche of a broader $100 billion commitment to domestic chip production over the next two decades, funded in part by $6.1 billion in CHIPS Act grants approved in April.
The Clay facility will produce leading-edge DRAM and high-bandwidth memory modules optimized for artificial intelligence inference workloads and data center infrastructure. Micron expects the first production tools online by late 2027, with full-scale output by 2029. The plant will employ roughly 9,000 workers at peak construction and support 1,500 permanent manufacturing roles, concentrating advanced packaging and memory integration under one roof for the first time in a US-based Micron operation. The company has not disclosed wafer capacity targets, but industry analysts peg the site at 50,000 wafer starts per month once ramped, roughly 15% of Micron's current global DRAM output.
The timing matters more than the ceremony. Micron is executing a two-theater capital deployment strategy that splits leading-edge investment between reshored US capacity and a simultaneous ₩14 trillion ($10.5 billion) expansion at its Hiroshima, Japan facility. The Hiroshima project, announced in parallel, will focus on extreme ultraviolet lithography nodes for 1-gamma DRAM, the same process technology earmarked for Clay. This dual-site buildout signals that Micron is not abandoning Asian manufacturing—it is duplicating it. The company retains 70% of its DRAM capacity in Taiwan and South Korea, and the US plant will not alter that balance materially before 2030.
For allocators, the second-order effect is supply-chain optionality, not supply-chain independence. Micron's customers—hyperscalers and defense contractors—are paying a premium for domestically sourced memory modules in specific contracts, particularly those tied to government cloud infrastructure and secure edge deployments. The Clay plant enables Micron to bid on classified programs and Federal Risk and Authorization Management Program workloads that currently disqualify foreign-fab components. That optionality has value, but it does not replace the cost advantage of Asian production. DRAM spot prices remain under pressure, trading at $2.80 per gigabyte for DDR5 modules as of last week, down 18% year-over-year. Micron's capital intensity rises while its per-unit margins compress, a tension that will show in free cash flow through 2026.
Operators should track three follow-on events. First, Samsung and SK Hynix have not announced comparable US expansions, creating a narrow window where Micron captures domestic premium contracts without peer competition—watch for federal procurement announcements through Q2 2025. Second, the CHIPS Act funding requires Micron to meet domestic content and workforce benchmarks; any delays in equipment supplier readiness or skilled labor availability will push the 2027 timeline right. Third, Micron's Hiroshima ramp overlaps the Clay buildout, meaning the company will be commissioning two leading-edge fabs simultaneously by late 2027, a capital and operational strain visible in quarterly CapEx guidance starting mid-2025.
The concrete is poured. The subsidy is locked. The競合は静観中。