Thrice rebuffed for US visa, Sanjay Mehrotra joins Satya Nadella and Sundar Pichai in the trillion-dollar club
TOI correspondent from Washington: In the summer of 1976, a Kanpur-born teenage engineering student from BITS Pilani stood in the lobby of the US embassy in New Delhi after being denied a student visa for the third time. His father, who had accompanied him, refused to leave. He had seen the photo of the consular officer in the lobby, gleaned that he was out for lunch, and decided he would wait to buttonhole him to ask why his son was being denied the visa despite confirmed admissions to three universities and all documentation in order. The persistence worked.
Half a century later, that student, Sanjay Mehrotra, is the CEO Micron Technology, the memory-chip giant that on Tuesday, propelled by the AI frenzy consuming Wall Street, crossed a market cap of $1 trillion to break into the top 10 US companies by valuation, nipping ahead of more storied giants such as WalMart, Berkshire Hathaway, and JP Morgan Chase. It is one of the more improbable stories in Silicon Valley: a lad repeatedly rebuffed by the US going on to become the steward of one of America’s most strategically important technology companies in the Age of MAGA.
He’s not alone. Mehrotra’s rise also completes an extraordinary desi tableau atop corporate America. Three of the world’s most valuable technology companies – Microsoft, Alphabet, and Micron, all with a market cap of trillion+ – are now run by Indian-born executives who arrived in the US as middle-class strivers carrying little more than engineering talent, parental sacrifice, and a quiet fire in the belly. Satya Nadella grew up in Hyderabad as the son of a civil servant. Sundar Pichai was raised in a modest Chennai apartment where the family once shared a rotary telephone. Mehrotra too came from a middle-class family in Kanpur that didn’t even have a phone. Calls to his parents during his early years in the US were always via “PP” – “padosi ka phone” – calling a neighbor who had a landline who would then summon his parents over. Astonishingly, their collective ascent is now reshaping both Silicon Valley and the political debate over globalization in Donald Trump’s MAGA-fied America.
Unlike Pichai and Nadella, who inherited already dominant software empires, Mehrotra’s achievement has been more industrial and arguably more difficult. Memory chips are cyclical, brutally capital-intensive, and historically dominated by Asian giants such as Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix. When Mehrotra became Micron’s CEO in 2017, the company was worth roughly $20 billion. Today, amid an AI-driven explosion in demand for high-bandwidth memory chips powering data centers, Micron hit the trillion-dollar threshold.
Wall Street’s sudden infatuation with Micron – a 180 per cent rise in stock in 2026, including 75 per cent in May alone – reflects a dawning realization: AI may run on Nvidia processors, but it remembers through Micron memory. The rally driving Micron has become so feverish in recent days that President Trump personally praised the company as “one of the hottest stocks” after hosting Mehrotra at the White House, amid allegations of insider trading after a Trump holding in Micron stock valued between roughly $50,000 and $100,000 came to light. Trump later took Mehrotra along on his China trip as part of a high-profile business delegation – a remarkable embrace from a president whose political movement has often attacked globalization and immigration.
That tension now defines the Indian-American CEO moment in modern America that goes beyond the tech troika. MAGA activists and economic nationalists increasingly accuse Indian-led technology companies of outsourcing jobs, favoring Indian engineers in hiring, and maintaining divided loyalties between the United States and India. In recent days, Arvind Krishna of IBM – another Trump favorite – has come under attack from right-wing activists furious over the company’s vast Indian workforce. Similar accusations have periodically dogged Microsoft’s Nadella and Google’s Pichai.
Yet the same White House that rails against globalization also courts these executives relentlessly because they now control companies central to America’s technological supremacy against China. Few industries illustrate that contradiction more sharply than memory chips where Micron has pushed bigly into India, after ventures in Singapore, Taiwan, Japan, China and Malaysia.
The company is investing more than $ 800 million of its own capital to build an ATMP (Assembly, Testing, Marking, and Packaging) facility in Sanand, Gujarat, as part of India’s $ 2.75 billion attempt to enter the global semiconductor supply chain. The Sanand facility is rapidly hiring engineers, automation specialists, manufacturing experts, and quality technicians for its 500,000 square feet of cleanroom space, one of the largest single-floor assembly and test cleanrooms anywhere in the world, as India races to transform itself from a software-services back office into a hardware manufacturing hub.
For Mehrotra, it is more personal. Unlike many Silicon Valley executives who maintain only ceremonial ties to India, he has repeatedly framed Micron’s India expansion as a strategic long-term investment in engineering talent and manufacturing depth. The symbolism matters: the student once denied entry into America is now helping define America’s semiconductor relationship with India.
Still, the parallels with Nadella and Pichai are striking. Under Nadella, Microsoft’s market value has exploded 10x – from roughly $300 billion in 2014 to over $3 trillion today, largely through cloud computing and AI. Pichai, who became CEO in 2019, has overseen a 4x rise – from $ 1 billion into an $4 trillion-plus club that has only one other member, Nvidia. This while navigating antitrust battles, AI disruption, and political scrutiny over search dominance.
All three men share certain management traits: low-key demeanor, engineering obsession, incrementalism over theatrics, and an aversion to Silicon Valley celebrity culture. None resembles the swaggering founder archetype popularized by other tech moguls like Elon Musk and Jeff Bezos. They are smooth operators, not showmen. In an industry once dominated by charismatic dropouts – Steve Jobs, Bill Gates, Larry Ellison – corporate America has quietly shifted toward technocratic immigrant executives with deep managerial discipline.
That shift is not accidental. The AI era increasingly rewards operational complexity, supply-chain coordination, and geopolitical balancing rather than pure product charisma. Mehrotra embodies that transition perfectly. He co-founded SanDisk before eventually leading Micron through one of the most consequential moments in semiconductor history. Today, memory chips sit at the center of the AI arms race between the United States and China. Micron’s fortunes are now tied not just to consumer electronics but to national security, data centers, and global power politics.
The irony is rich. A young Indian student once struggled to convince America he deserved entry into the country. Today, Washington treats him as essential to preserving America’s technological dominance. And somewhere in the story lies a larger truth about modern America itself: even in an age of MAGA nativism and suspicion toward globalization, some of the companies most central to American power are increasingly run by Indian immigrants who arrived after rejected visas, middle-class anxieties, and parents willing to wait endlessly in embassy lobbies for a second chance.
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Half a century later, that student, Sanjay Mehrotra, is the CEO Micron Technology, the memory-chip giant that on Tuesday, propelled by the AI frenzy consuming Wall Street, crossed a market cap of $1 trillion to break into the top 10 US companies by valuation, nipping ahead of more storied giants such as WalMart, Berkshire Hathaway, and JP Morgan Chase. It is one of the more improbable stories in Silicon Valley: a lad repeatedly rebuffed by the US going on to become the steward of one of America’s most strategically important technology companies in the Age of MAGA.
He’s not alone. Mehrotra’s rise also completes an extraordinary desi tableau atop corporate America. Three of the world’s most valuable technology companies – Microsoft, Alphabet, and Micron, all with a market cap of trillion+ – are now run by Indian-born executives who arrived in the US as middle-class strivers carrying little more than engineering talent, parental sacrifice, and a quiet fire in the belly. Satya Nadella grew up in Hyderabad as the son of a civil servant. Sundar Pichai was raised in a modest Chennai apartment where the family once shared a rotary telephone. Mehrotra too came from a middle-class family in Kanpur that didn’t even have a phone. Calls to his parents during his early years in the US were always via “PP” – “padosi ka phone” – calling a neighbor who had a landline who would then summon his parents over. Astonishingly, their collective ascent is now reshaping both Silicon Valley and the political debate over globalization in Donald Trump’s MAGA-fied America.
Unlike Pichai and Nadella, who inherited already dominant software empires, Mehrotra’s achievement has been more industrial and arguably more difficult. Memory chips are cyclical, brutally capital-intensive, and historically dominated by Asian giants such as Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix. When Mehrotra became Micron’s CEO in 2017, the company was worth roughly $20 billion. Today, amid an AI-driven explosion in demand for high-bandwidth memory chips powering data centers, Micron hit the trillion-dollar threshold.
Wall Street’s sudden infatuation with Micron – a 180 per cent rise in stock in 2026, including 75 per cent in May alone – reflects a dawning realization: AI may run on Nvidia processors, but it remembers through Micron memory. The rally driving Micron has become so feverish in recent days that President Trump personally praised the company as “one of the hottest stocks” after hosting Mehrotra at the White House, amid allegations of insider trading after a Trump holding in Micron stock valued between roughly $50,000 and $100,000 came to light. Trump later took Mehrotra along on his China trip as part of a high-profile business delegation – a remarkable embrace from a president whose political movement has often attacked globalization and immigration.
That tension now defines the Indian-American CEO moment in modern America that goes beyond the tech troika. MAGA activists and economic nationalists increasingly accuse Indian-led technology companies of outsourcing jobs, favoring Indian engineers in hiring, and maintaining divided loyalties between the United States and India. In recent days, Arvind Krishna of IBM – another Trump favorite – has come under attack from right-wing activists furious over the company’s vast Indian workforce. Similar accusations have periodically dogged Microsoft’s Nadella and Google’s Pichai.
Yet the same White House that rails against globalization also courts these executives relentlessly because they now control companies central to America’s technological supremacy against China. Few industries illustrate that contradiction more sharply than memory chips where Micron has pushed bigly into India, after ventures in Singapore, Taiwan, Japan, China and Malaysia.
The company is investing more than $ 800 million of its own capital to build an ATMP (Assembly, Testing, Marking, and Packaging) facility in Sanand, Gujarat, as part of India’s $ 2.75 billion attempt to enter the global semiconductor supply chain. The Sanand facility is rapidly hiring engineers, automation specialists, manufacturing experts, and quality technicians for its 500,000 square feet of cleanroom space, one of the largest single-floor assembly and test cleanrooms anywhere in the world, as India races to transform itself from a software-services back office into a hardware manufacturing hub.
For Mehrotra, it is more personal. Unlike many Silicon Valley executives who maintain only ceremonial ties to India, he has repeatedly framed Micron’s India expansion as a strategic long-term investment in engineering talent and manufacturing depth. The symbolism matters: the student once denied entry into America is now helping define America’s semiconductor relationship with India.
Still, the parallels with Nadella and Pichai are striking. Under Nadella, Microsoft’s market value has exploded 10x – from roughly $300 billion in 2014 to over $3 trillion today, largely through cloud computing and AI. Pichai, who became CEO in 2019, has overseen a 4x rise – from $ 1 billion into an $4 trillion-plus club that has only one other member, Nvidia. This while navigating antitrust battles, AI disruption, and political scrutiny over search dominance.
All three men share certain management traits: low-key demeanor, engineering obsession, incrementalism over theatrics, and an aversion to Silicon Valley celebrity culture. None resembles the swaggering founder archetype popularized by other tech moguls like Elon Musk and Jeff Bezos. They are smooth operators, not showmen. In an industry once dominated by charismatic dropouts – Steve Jobs, Bill Gates, Larry Ellison – corporate America has quietly shifted toward technocratic immigrant executives with deep managerial discipline.
That shift is not accidental. The AI era increasingly rewards operational complexity, supply-chain coordination, and geopolitical balancing rather than pure product charisma. Mehrotra embodies that transition perfectly. He co-founded SanDisk before eventually leading Micron through one of the most consequential moments in semiconductor history. Today, memory chips sit at the center of the AI arms race between the United States and China. Micron’s fortunes are now tied not just to consumer electronics but to national security, data centers, and global power politics.
The irony is rich. A young Indian student once struggled to convince America he deserved entry into the country. Today, Washington treats him as essential to preserving America’s technological dominance. And somewhere in the story lies a larger truth about modern America itself: even in an age of MAGA nativism and suspicion toward globalization, some of the companies most central to American power are increasingly run by Indian immigrants who arrived after rejected visas, middle-class anxieties, and parents willing to wait endlessly in embassy lobbies for a second chance.
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Comments (88)
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Umesh KamatMost Interacted
14 hours ago
Well hope government of India is taking notice if it.. we are stuck into caste based reservation in education and jobs.. religious...Read More
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