A stock does not climb 4,000% in twelve months by accident, and it does not keep attracting fresh upgrade calls from major banks without a story underneath it worth taking seriously. SanDisk (NASDAQ:SNDK) has both, and the week’s analyst activity suggests the people paid to track this company most closely believe the move is far from finished.
Barclays made the loudest call. Analyst Tom O’Malley lifted his rating from neutral to overweight and pushed his price target from $1,200 all the way to $2,300, a figure that implies roughly 45% additional upside from where the stock was trading before the note landed. His core argument was direct: memory and storage occupy the most attractive position in the technology investment landscape outside of accelerators themselves, and the conditions driving that attractiveness are not going away anytime soon. Mizuho added to the momentum, with analyst Vijay Rakesh bumping his target to $1,825 from $1,625 while keeping his outperform rating firmly in place. Eighteen of the analysts currently covering the stock have a buy recommendation on record.
That kind of consensus around a name that has already had one of the great single-year runs in recent market history is worth pausing on. Analysts do not typically pile into upgrade calls on stocks that have already made their move. The fact that they are doing exactly that here reflects a genuine reassessment of what this business looks like structurally, not just cyclically.
The Quarter That Changed the Conversation
To understand where the conviction is coming from, start with what SanDisk actually reported in its most recent quarter. Revenue came in at $5.95 billion, a figure that represented 251% growth compared to the same period a year earlier. Gross margins expanded by more than 55 percentage points year over year as NAND flash pricing moved sharply in the company’s favor. Adjusted earnings per share reached $23.41, which looks even more extraordinary when you consider the company was posting a loss of $0.30 per share in the equivalent quarter twelve months prior.
The datacenter segment drove much of the drama, with revenue there growing 233% on a sequential basis alone. The company also disclosed five separate multi-year supply agreements tied specifically to AI infrastructure, with the combined value of those deals sitting around $42 billion. A $6 billion share buyback program arrived alongside the results, signaling that management sees enough financial confidence in the forward outlook to return capital aggressively while simultaneously investing in capacity.
These are not the results of a company catching a temporary tailwind. They reflect a business operating inside a market that has fundamentally repriced what its product is worth.
Why This Cycle Feels Different
Memory has a reputation that precedes it and not always in a flattering way. The sector’s history is one of violent swings between scarcity and oversupply, with prices moving in whichever direction causes the most pain for whoever bet the wrong way. Investors who have been around long enough have learned to treat memory recoveries with a certain skepticism, knowing that the correction often arrives faster than the warning signs suggest.
The current environment carries features that complicate the usual script. The demand pulling flash storage prices higher is not coming primarily from smartphone upgrades or PC replacement cycles, the consumer categories that historically drove the biggest demand swings and the sharpest reversals. It is coming from enterprise data centers, cloud infrastructure buildouts, and AI workloads, categories where customers sign multi-year contracts, make substantial prepayments, and treat supply access as a strategic priority rather than a procurement line item.
Buried inside the Barclays note was an observation about how SanDisk is actually selling its output that changes the investment case considerably. The agreements the company has been signing include prepayments and performance obligations that give customers supply visibility while locking in guaranteed revenue for SanDisk. That model represents a meaningful departure from how memory companies have historically sold their output, and it changes the risk profile of the business in ways that a simple price-to-earnings comparison does not fully capture.
The AI Storage Angle
Much of the investment conversation around artificial intelligence has understandably centered on the processing side, the GPUs, the custom accelerators, the networking infrastructure connecting compute clusters together. Storage has received comparatively little attention despite sitting at the foundation of everything AI systems actually do.
Training a large language model requires storing and repeatedly accessing datasets that can run into hundreds of terabytes. Inference at scale generates its own persistent storage demands. Every query, every output, every piece of context maintained across an AI interaction touches storage infrastructure somewhere in the chain. As AI workloads grow in volume and complexity, the underlying storage demand compounds accordingly, and the companies best positioned to supply high-performance flash at scale find themselves with pricing leverage they have rarely enjoyed before.
Where the Risk Lives
SanDisk currently trades at a premium that reflects significant confidence in the durability of current conditions. Peers like Micron and SK Hynix trade at single-digit earnings multiples. SanDisk commands a multiple above 20 times 2026 estimates, a gap that assumes the company’s pure-play NAND exposure and contract structure justify a meaningfully higher valuation than the rest of the sector.
That premium works until it does not. Any meaningful softening in AI infrastructure spending, any unexpected supply increase from competitors, or any stumble in SanDisk’s own execution against its contracted commitments would test that valuation quickly. Earnings growth projections running at 21 times for the current fiscal year leave very little room for a miss before the market recalibrates sharply.
The story is real. The numbers are genuine. The structural demand driving this cycle is more durable than previous recoveries. Whether all of that together justifies where the stock currently trades is the question investors entering here need to sit with honestly before the next quarterly report arrives.
Benzinga Disclaimer: This article is from an unpaid external contributor. It does not represent Benzinga’s reporting and has not been edited for content or accuracy.
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