Sandisk Corporation (SNDK) — Equity Research Report

NASDAQ: SNDK SPUN OFF FROM WDC — FEB 2025

Sandisk Corporation
Equity Research Report

Report Date: June 11, 2026  |  Data as of: Q3 FY2026 Earnings (April 30, 2026) + market data June 10, 2026  |  Sector: Semiconductors — NAND Flash Memory  |  HQ: Milpitas, California, USA

⚠ Disclaimer & Rating: This report is for educational and informational purposes only. It does not constitute investment advice, a buy/sell recommendation, or a solicitation to trade. All financial data is cited from public Sandisk filings and analyst sources, with dates noted. Consult a licensed financial advisor before making investment decisions. Past performance is not indicative of future results. Special note: SNDK has risen extremely rapidly over the past year. Extreme price moves in either direction warrant extra caution and position-sizing discipline regardless of fundamentals.
Cited Fact Analyst Assumption / Estimate Risk Factor
Stock Price ~$1,643 Jun 10 close; 52wk range $39 → $1,861(!)
Market Cap ~$126B Jun 9, 2026
Q3 FY26 Revenue $5.95B +251% YoY, +97% QoQ
Q3 Gross Margin 78.4% vs ~30s% historical norm
Q4 FY26 Guide $7.75–8.25B EPS $30–33 non-GAAP
NBM Backlog (RPO) $42B+ 3 of 5 contracts; $11B+ guarantees
Balance Sheet Zero Debt + $6B buyback authorized
1-Year Return ~4,000%+ Since Feb 2025 spinoff
01

Business Model — What Does Sandisk Actually Do?

Sandisk makes NAND flash memory — the chips that store data persistently in SSDs, smartphones, memory cards, and USB drives. If DRAM (made by Micron, Samsung, SK Hynix) is a computer’s short-term working memory, NAND is its long-term storage: where files, models, photos, and databases actually live when the power is off.

The company has a long, winding history: founded in 1988, acquired by Western Digital in 2016, and spun off as an independent company in February 2025 — beginning trading on February 24, 2025 (Sandisk 10-Q, SEC filing). What followed was one of the most extraordinary first years of any public company in recent memory: the stock rose from a 52-week low of ~$39 to over $1,800, as the AI data center boom collided with a global NAND shortage.

Sandisk’s manufacturing runs through Flash Ventures — a decades-old joint venture with Japan’s Kioxia, operating wafer fabs in Yokkaichi and Kitakami, Japan (K1, Y7, K2 facilities per Sandisk’s 10-Q). This JV structure means Sandisk shares world-class fab capacity and R&D costs without bearing the full capital burden alone — but also means its supply is tied to a partner it doesn’t control.

📌 Cited Fact — The Transformation in One Quote
“This quarter marks a fundamental inflection point for Sandisk — where our technology leadership is enabling a deliberate shift in our mix toward the highest-value end markets, led by Datacenter… We are also advancing to a new business model built on multi-year customer engagements backed by firm financial commitments.” — CEO David Goeckeler, Q3 FY2026 press release, April 30, 2026.

The “New Business Model” (NBM) is the most important strategic shift to understand. Historically, NAND was a brutal commodity business: prices swung wildly with supply/demand, and producers suffered multi-year loss periods. Sandisk is now signing multi-year supply contracts with committed volumes, backed by enforceable financial guarantees (prepayments and third-party financial instruments that compensate Sandisk if customers walk away). This attempts to convert a boom-bust commodity business into something closer to a contracted industrial supplier — the central question of the entire investment story.

02

Revenue Streams

Segment What it includes Q3 FY26 (Apr 2026) Trend
Datacenter Enterprise SSDs (TLC performance + QLC capacity tiers) for AI infrastructure, hyperscalers, and the Stargate project $1.47B (~25%) +233% QoQ, +645% YoY
Edge NAND for smartphones, PCs, automotive, IoT — sold to device makers ~$3.1B (~52%) Growing on AI phone storage upgrades
Consumer Retail SanDisk-brand products: memory cards, USB drives, portable SSDs ~$1.4B est. (~23%) −10% QoQ — price-sensitive demand fading
TOTAL $5.95B +97% QoQ, +251% YoY
📌 Cited Facts — The Revenue Explosion in Sequence
Quarterly revenue progression through FY2026: Q1 ~$2.3B → Q2 $3.03B (+31% QoQ, Jan 29, 2026) → Q3 $5.95B (+97% QoQ, Apr 30, 2026) → Q4 guided $7.75–8.25B. Full FY2026 revenue is tracking to roughly $19–20 billion versus ~$7 billion in FY2025 — nearly tripling in a single year. Zacks consensus for FY2026: $19.42B (+164% YoY) with EPS of $64.82 (+2,068% YoY). (SEC 8-Ks; Zacks via TradingView, June 8, 2026)

Critical nuance for beginners: most of this growth is price, not volume. TrendForce reported the top-five NAND suppliers’ combined Q1 2026 revenue jumped 83.7% QoQ to $38.9 billion “primarily fueled by elevated prices due to the scarcity, not by higher output volumes” (IndexBox citing TrendForce, June 2026). When the product you sell triples in price while your costs barely move, margins explode — Sandisk’s gross margin went from industry-typical ~30% levels to 78.4% in Q3. That’s also exactly why the durability question matters so much: prices that triple can also fall.

03

Industry Trends — The NAND Supercycle

1. The AI Storage Shortage. AI workloads — inference, retrieval-augmented generation (RAG), KV cache, agentic systems — require massive amounts of fast, low-latency storage sitting next to GPUs. Data center became the largest NAND end market in 2026 for the first time. TrendForce upgraded its Q1 2026 NAND contract price forecast from +33–38% QoQ to as high as +55–60% as AI demand decisively outpaced supply (Accio/TrendForce summaries, early 2026).

2. Supply Discipline — Deliberate and Coordinated. Samsung, SK Hynix, Kioxia, and Micron all scaled back NAND production in H2 2025 (SK Hynix cut ~10%), after the brutal 2023–24 downturn taught producers that flooding the market destroys everyone’s profits (TrendForce citing Chosun Biz, Nov 13, 2025). Crucially, TrendForce reports major suppliers will not add substantial new capacity in 2026 — new fabs won’t reach meaningful volume until late 2026–2027 (NAND Research, March 2026).

3. The HBM Squeeze — A Structural, Not Cyclical, Driver. Memory makers are converting wafer capacity to High Bandwidth Memory for AI accelerators at roughly a 3-to-1 ratio (every HBM wafer displaces ~3 conventional wafers’ worth of output, per Micron via NAND Research, May 2026). This structurally starves conventional DRAM and NAND supply for as long as the AI buildout continues — a key reason analysts argue this cycle differs from previous ones.

4. Edge AI Storage Upgrades. As 2026 smartphones integrate local LLMs, baseline storage is shifting from 256GB toward 1TB per device — a quiet but massive volume tailwind for mobile NAND (FinancialContent Deep Dive, March 31, 2026).

📌 Cited Fact — Management’s Demand View
On the Q3 call (April 30, 2026), Sandisk management revised its calendar-2026 data center sector growth expectation upward to the “mid-70s%” from “the 60s%” three months earlier, and noted over one-third of fiscal 2027 bit shipments are already under firm contractual commitment. (Globe and Mail Q3 transcript summary)
04

Competitive Landscape

NAND is a concentrated oligopoly: the top manufacturers control ~92% of global capacity. Sandisk holds roughly 13% market share — ranked 4th–5th by volume, tied with Micron in recent quarters — but is regarded as among the most agile players in the high-margin enterprise segment (FinancialContent, March 2026; TrendForce Q1 2026 data).

Samsung Electronics
NAND Market Leader (~35%)
Posted $13.5B in Q1 2026 NAND revenue alone (+105% QoQ). Ramping 286-layer V9 QLC in 2026 at Pyeongtaek. Scale leader with deepest pockets — but also reportedly weighing 20–30%+ price hikes, supporting the whole industry’s pricing umbrella.
SK Hynix (+ Solidigm)
#2 NAND (~22%)
Q4 2025 NAND revenue +47.8% QoQ to $5.2B. World HBM leader — its entire 2026 HBM output sold out by Oct 2025. Plans 321-layer QLC shipments in H2 2026. The HBM priority is what’s starving NAND supply industry-wide.
Kioxia
#3 NAND — and Sandisk’s JV Partner
Frenemy: shares Flash Ventures fabs with Sandisk, so they co-develop technology and split wafer output, yet compete for the same customers. Record Q4 2025 revenue ($3.3B). Plans to double capacity by 2029 and reach 1,000+ layer NAND by 2031.
Micron (MU)
#4–5 NAND, DRAM Giant
Tied with Sandisk in NAND share recently (each +96.7% revenue QoQ in Q1 2026). More diversified (DRAM + HBM + NAND) — the closest US-listed comparable, and likely already on your watchlist for the same memory-cycle thesis.
YMTC (China)
Constrained Challenger
China’s national NAND champion. Constrained by US export controls — cannot access advanced tooling to close the leading-edge gap (NAND Research, May 2026). A long-term wildcard if restrictions ease, not a near-term threat.
Western Digital (WDC)
Former Parent — HDDs
Post-spinoff, WDC kept hard disk drives; Sandisk took flash. They no longer compete directly — HDDs serve cold/archival storage, NAND serves hot/fast storage. Both have boomed on AI storage demand.
📌 Sandisk’s Differentiators
(1) BiCS technology leadership via the Kioxia JV, with an aggressive jump to BiCS8/BiCS10 nodes; (2) High Bandwidth Flash (HBF) — a pioneering architecture targeting DRAM-like bandwidth at a fraction of HBM’s cost for AI inference, with product launches expected late 2026–2027. If HBF becomes a standard for AI inference, analysts estimate it could roughly double Sandisk’s addressable market (FinancialContent, Mar 2026; Quartr summary, May 2026); (3) First-mover on the NBM contract model — locking customers into multi-year committed volumes before competitors formalized similar structures.
05

Financial Performance

Metric Q1 FY26
(Oct 2025)
Q2 FY26
(Jan 2026)
Q3 FY26
(Apr 2026)
Q4 FY26 Guide
(due ~Jul 2026)
Revenue ~$2.31B $3.03B (+31% QoQ) $5.95B (+97% QoQ) $7.75–8.25B
GAAP Net Income $112M $803M $3,615M
GAAP Diluted EPS ~$0.76 $5.15 $23.03
Non-GAAP Diluted EPS ~$1.30 $6.20 $23.41 $30.00–33.00
Gross Margin ~29% ~40s% 78.4% Elevated
Datacenter Revenue ~$0.3B ~$0.44B (+64% QoQ) $1.47B (+233% QoQ) QLC Stargate revenue begins
📌 Cited Facts — Balance Sheet & Capital Returns
CEO Goeckeler (April 30, 2026): “With a zero-debt balance sheet, strong cash generation, and a recently authorized share repurchase program, we are positioned to deliver substantial long-term value creation.” The board authorized a $6 billion buyback funded by operating cash flows (Simply Wall St / Yahoo Finance, May 2026). Within FY2026 alone, retained earnings swung from an accumulated deficit of −$1.78B (June 2025) to positive — the income statement repaired the balance sheet in three quarters. (Sandisk 10-Qs)
⚠ Context — How Fast This Reversed
A detail worth remembering: in the same fiscal year’s first half, Sandisk was cutting fab utilization — incurring $11M of underutilization charges at Flash Ventures because flash demand was too weak (Sandisk 10-Q for the period ended Jan 2, 2026). Within roughly two quarters, the same company posted a 78% gross margin. That whiplash is the essential nature of memory economics, in both directions.
06

Valuation — The Hardest Part of This Story

Valuing SNDK is genuinely difficult, and honest analysts disagree sharply. The stock closed at $1,643 on June 10, 2026, with an all-time closing high of $1,831 on June 3 — versus a 52-week low of $39.44 (MacroTrends, June 2026). A ~4,000% one-year return means the market has already priced in an enormous amount of good news. The core problem: which “E” do you put under the P/E?

Metric / View Value Comment
Market Cap ~$126B From ~$5–6B at spinoff — now larger than many S&P 100 companies
P/E on FY2026 consensus EPS (~$65) ~25x Looks reasonable — but FY26 includes pre-boom quarters
Implied annualized run-rate (Q4 guide ~$31.50 EPS × 4) ~13x Looks cheap — IF peak-cycle earnings were sustainable (historically they are not)
Forward P/E per 24/7 Wall St (Jun 4, 2026) ~57x “Rich for a memory cyclical, even one positioned for AI” — methodology differences show how contested the number is
Street consensus price target ~$1,550 BELOW the market price — the market is more bullish than the average analyst (TIKR, May 2026)
FY2027 consensus revenue ~$45B Implies a further +125% from FY2026’s ~$20B (Quartr summary, May 28, 2026)
⚠ Analyst Estimates (Not Sandisk-issued) — Extreme Dispersion
TIKR (May 2026): scenario range of ~$1,800 (low) to ~$3,415 (high), mid-case ~$2,420 — but explicitly notes SNDK already trades above street consensus (~$1,550). 24/7 Wall St (June 4, 2026): target $1,453 with a bear case of $1,027 (−42%) “if NAND pricing rolls over,” arguing “the fundamentals are exceptional, but the price has already discounted them.” The spread between credible published scenarios — roughly $1,000 to $3,400 — is itself the single most informative valuation data point: nobody knows where mid-cycle earnings will settle.

The classic cyclical valuation trap, explained simply: commodity-cyclical stocks often look cheapest on P/E at the exact top of the cycle (earnings are peaking) and most expensive at the bottom (earnings are depressed). A 13x multiple on peak earnings can be far more dangerous than 50x on trough earnings. The bull counterargument is that the NBM contracts and AI structural demand mean “this time the cycle is dampened” — which is precisely the proposition the current price is paying for.

07

Growth Drivers

Near-term (FY2026–27):

Q4 FY2026 guidance of $7.75–8.25B implies yet another ~35% sequential step-up. QLC-based “Stargate” capacity solutions begin shipping revenue in Q4 — connecting Sandisk directly to the largest AI infrastructure project in the world. NAND contract prices continue rising (TrendForce: +33–60% QoQ ranges through early 2026) while no meaningful new industry supply arrives before late 2026–2027.

Medium-term — the NBM flywheel:

Five NBM agreements signed to date (three in Q3, two more in early Q4), spanning up to five years. The three Q3 contracts alone carry $42 billion in minimum contractual revenue (RPO); guarantees across all five exceed $11 billion, including $400M of prepayments already on the balance sheet. Over one-third of FY2027 bit supply is committed, with more agreements in active discussion. Contracts include both fixed and variable pricing elements — preserving upside participation if market prices keep rising. (SEC 8-K Apr 30, 2026; Zacks via TradingView, Jun 8, 2026; Motley Fool, May 27, 2026)

Long-term — High Bandwidth Flash (HBF):

HBF targets DRAM-like bandwidth at a fraction of HBM’s cost, aimed squarely at AI inference — where the industry’s compute spending is migrating. Product launches are expected late 2026 into 2027. If HBF is adopted as a standard tier in the AI memory hierarchy (alongside or partially replacing HBM for inference), it could roughly double Sandisk’s addressable market. Edge AI (1TB-standard smartphones) provides a second, quieter long-term volume driver. (Quartr May 2026; FinancialContent Mar 2026)

08

Key Risks

RiskSeverityExplanation
NAND Cycle Reversal High The defining risk. Most of the revenue explosion is price-driven, and memory prices have crashed 50–70% in past downcycles. If hyperscaler demand pauses or new supply (late 2026–2027 fabs, Kioxia’s plan to double capacity by 2029) arrives into softening demand, margins compress violently. TIKR: a demand slowdown “could compress both volumes and margins faster than the NBM agreements can offset.” Sandisk itself was cutting fab utilization as recently as H1 FY2026.
Peak-Multiple-on-Peak-Earnings High After a ~4,000% run, the stock trades above street consensus (~$1,550). Published bear cases sit ~40% below current prices. Even if fundamentals stay strong, any guidance miss or NAND spot-price wobble could trigger outsized drawdowns — high-beta cyclicals fall faster than they rise.
Kioxia JV Dependence Medium All wafer supply flows through Flash Ventures with Kioxia (K1/Y7/K2 fabs in Japan). Sandisk doesn’t unilaterally control capacity, technology cadence, or expansion decisions — and its JV partner is also a competitor. Earthquake/operational risk at concentrated Japanese sites adds a physical dimension (a 2022 contamination incident at these fabs disrupted global NAND supply).
Customer Concentration (Hyperscalers) Medium Datacenter growth is concentrated among a handful of AI infrastructure builders and the Stargate ecosystem. NBM guarantees ($11B+) mitigate but don’t eliminate this — guarantees compensate for broken commitments, they don’t replace a lost growth trajectory. (24/7 Wall St, Jun 2026)
NBM Model Unproven Through a Downturn Medium The contracts have never been tested in a falling-price environment. Variable pricing elements cut both ways; customers under financial stress renegotiate. The thesis that NBM “structurally dampens the cycle” is a forward-looking claim, not yet an observed fact.
Consumer Segment Softness Medium Consumer revenue fell ~10% QoQ in Q3 as retail buyers balked at higher prices — an early demonstration that NAND price hikes destroy price-sensitive demand. If edge/mobile buyers also push back, the volume side weakens.
Technology Execution (BiCS10 / HBF) Low-Med Aggressive node transitions (BiCS8→BiCS10) carry yield/defect risk; HBF is a new architecture that must win ecosystem adoption against entrenched HBM roadmaps. Slippage would hand momentum to Samsung/SK Hynix. (FinancialContent, Mar 2026)
Tariffs / Geopolitics Low Japan-concentrated manufacturing with global sales creates tariff exposure; flagged by analysts but currently manageable. YMTC becoming unconstrained (export-control easing) is a tail risk to long-term industry pricing.
09

Bull / Base / Bear Cases

⚠ Important — These Are Analyst Scenarios, Not Forecasts
These scenarios synthesize published analyst views (TIKR’s $1,800–$3,415 range, street consensus ~$1,550, 24/7 Wall St’s $1,453 target and $1,027 bear case) plus industry supply/demand research. The unusually wide spread reflects genuine, unresolved uncertainty — treat all three as thinking frameworks.
🐂 Bull Case
“The Cycle Is Dead” — FY27 ~$45B+
AI inference demand keeps NAND structurally short through 2027+. The NBM model expands well beyond one-third of supply, converting Sandisk into a contracted infrastructure supplier deserving a re-rated multiple. HBF launches successfully and opens a second TAM in the AI memory hierarchy. FY2027 consensus of ~$45B proves conservative; the $6B buyback shrinks the float at high cash generation. Consistent with TIKR’s high case (~$3,400) — roughly double the current price.
📊 Base Case
Strong But Decelerating — Plateau in FY27–28
Pricing stays elevated through FY2027 as supply additions lag, then normalizes gradually. NBM contracts smooth — but don’t eliminate — the eventual downcycle. Revenue lands near consensus (~$45B FY27) but margins retreat from 78% toward the 50s–60s as new industry supply arrives in 2027. The stock consolidates its enormous gains, oscillating around analyst mid-cases (~$1,500–$2,400) while the market waits to see mid-cycle earnings power. Roughly the TIKR mid-case / street consensus zone.
🐻 Bear Case
Classic Memory Bust — Price Rolls Over
AI capex digests in 2027; hyperscalers work through inventory just as new fab capacity (Samsung V9 QLC ramp, SK Hynix 321-layer, Kioxia expansion) hits the market. NAND prices fall hard; the consumer/edge demand destruction already visible spreads. NBM variable-pricing clauses transmit the decline into contracted volumes. Earnings revert toward historical norms and the stock de-rates as a cyclical — consistent with the published ~$1,027 bear target (−40%), with historical memory busts suggesting even deeper drawdowns are possible.
10

Research Summary

Sandisk — The Analyst’s View in Plain Language

Sandisk is the most extreme expression of the AI infrastructure trade in the entire semiconductor universe. Sixteen months ago it was an unloved spinoff trading near $40, cutting fab utilization because nobody wanted flash memory. Today it is a ~$126 billion company posting 78% gross margins, $23 of quarterly EPS, a $42 billion contracted backlog, zero debt, and a $6 billion buyback — with guidance implying the numbers get even bigger next quarter. Both of those companies are the same company. That is the essential lesson of memory economics.

What’s genuinely new and real: the AI inference storage demand is not imaginary — data center became NAND’s largest market, management keeps revising demand upward, and the entire supplier oligopoly is exercising unprecedented discipline. The NBM contracts, with $11B+ in enforceable guarantees, are a serious structural attempt to break the boom-bust pattern, and no competitor moved on this faster than Sandisk. The zero-debt balance sheet means Sandisk — unlike leveraged AI infrastructure plays — can survive any downturn.

What’s old and unchanged: NAND remains a commodity whose price tripled mostly because supply was deliberately restricted into a demand spike. Every previous memory supercycle ended the same way — with supply arriving into decelerating demand — and new fabs are already scheduled for late 2026–2027. The consumer segment’s 10% decline is the canary: high prices destroy demand at the margin. And critically, the stock now trades above the average analyst’s target, meaning the market is paying today for the bull case to be right.

The honest framing for a beginner: SNDK is no longer an early-cycle opportunity; it is a late-recognition, high-momentum position where the central question has shifted from “is the business inflecting?” (answered: yes) to “how much of the inflection is already in the price, and is this cycle truly different?” (unanswered). The ~$1,000-to-$3,400 spread in credible published scenarios is the widest of any large-cap this report series has covered — wider than ASML’s, wider than Oracle’s. Position sizing and a pre-defined view on NAND pricing in 2027 matter more here than for almost any other stock. Watch: Q4 results (~July 2026), NBM contract additions, TrendForce monthly NAND pricing, competitor capacity announcements, and the HBF launch timeline.

📋 No Investment Recommendation: This report presents facts and analysis only. It does not include a Buy, Hold, or Sell rating. Given the extreme volatility of this name, consider your personal financial situation, risk tolerance, and investment horizon, and consult a licensed financial professional before making any decision.

Primary Sources Referenced

Sandisk Q3 FY2026 Press Release / SEC Form 8-K (April 30, 2026) · Sandisk Q2 FY2026 Press Release / 8-K (January 29, 2026) · Sandisk 10-Q Filings (periods ended Jan 2 & Apr 3, 2026) · Sandisk Q3 FY2026 Earnings Call Transcript (Globe and Mail summary, April 30, 2026) · Zacks “SNDK’s New Business Model Boosts Profitability” (TradingView, June 8, 2026) · Motley Fool “Sandisk Has Climbed From $36 to $1,590 in a Year” (May 27, 2026) · TIKR “Sandisk Has Returned Over 4,000% Since Its Spinoff” (May 2026) · 24/7 Wall St SNDK Price Prediction (June 4, 2026) · MacroTrends SNDK Price History & Market Cap (June 9–10, 2026) · TrendForce “Top Five NAND Suppliers Post 23.8% QoQ Growth in 4Q25” (March 3, 2026) · IndexBox / TrendForce Q1 2026 NAND Revenue Data (June 2026) · NAND Research “Memory & Flash Crisis Updates” (March & May 2026) · TrendForce / Chosun Biz “NAND Giants Cut Output in 2H25” (November 13, 2025) · FinancialContent “Deep Dive: SanDisk and the 2026 NAND Flash Shortage” (March 31, 2026) · Quartr Sandisk Investor Summary (May 28, 2026) · eeNews Europe / TrendForce Memory Price Forecasts (January 7, 2026)

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