Despite a broader market sell-off in global storage stocks driven by concerns over rising capital expenditures and potential supply shortages, Wall Street giant Morgan Stanley has raised its price target for SanDisk Corp. (SNDK.US) from $263 to $273 while maintaining an "Overweight" rating. The firm dismissed market fears as unfounded, reaffirming its positive outlook on the sector's fundamentals.
Morgan Stanley analysts highlighted recent reports indicating tightening supply and sustained price increases for memory chips, suggesting strong profit growth ahead for DRAM and NAND-focused companies like SanDisk.
SanDisk recently reported stellar Q1 FY2026 results, with record revenue of $2.3 billion (up 21% QoQ and 23% YoY) and non-GAAP EPS surging from $0.29 to $1.22. Inventory turnover days improved from 135 to 115. The company provided optimistic Q2 guidance, projecting revenue between $2.55-$2.65 billion.
Following its February 2025 spin-off from Western Digital (WDC.US), SanDisk has emerged as a pure-play NAND Flash and SSD specialist. The company operates globally across the U.S., Europe, Middle East, Africa, and Asia, developing and manufacturing data storage solutions.
The SSD market features an oligopolistic structure, with SanDisk ranking behind only Samsung, SK Hynix, and Micron. Since its spin-off, SanDisk's stock has skyrocketed nearly 500%, fueled by unprecedented AI-driven storage demand.
Mega AI infrastructure projects like OpenAI's $1.4 trillion computing initiatives and the "Stargate" program are creating massive demand for high-performance enterprise storage solutions (including HBM systems, enterprise SSDs/HDDs, and server-grade DDR5), driving both prices and storage stocks higher.