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Sandisk Climbs as Analysts Raise Targets on AI Memory Demand

Jun 23, 2026·3 min read

The artificial-intelligence boom is creating winners far beyond the companies building chatbots. One of the biggest beneficiaries may be Sandisk, whose shares surged again this week after analysts raised price targets and argued that soaring demand for AI infrastructure will keep memory-chip supplies tight and profits flowing.

On Monday, June 8, Bank of America analyst Wamsi Mohan raised his price target on Sandisk to $2,100 from $1,550, maintaining a buy rating. Shortly afterward, Mizuho lifted its own target to $2,200 from $1,825, keeping an outperform rating. Investors responded favorably, sending shares higher on Tuesday, June 9.

To understand why Wall Street is so excited, it helps to understand what Sandisk actually sells. The company is one of the world’s leading producers of NAND flash memory, the storage technology found in smartphones, laptops, data centers, and increasingly the massive servers that power artificial-intelligence systems.

Every AI model requires enormous amounts of data storage. As technology giants race to build new AI infrastructure, demand for memory chips has risen faster than manufacturers can increase production. Analysts believe that imbalance will continue supporting higher prices and stronger profits for companies like Sandisk.

The stock’s performance reflects that optimism. Sandisk shares have gained more than 550% during 2026, making it one of the market’s biggest winners. The rally briefly paused last week when concerns about AI valuations triggered a broader technology selloff, but analysts viewed the decline as a buying opportunity rather than a sign of weakening demand.

Another factor attracting investors is Sandisk’s evolving business model. The company has increasingly signed long-term supply agreements that lock in customer commitments and provide more predictable revenue. Many of those contracts begin with fixed pricing before transitioning to variable pricing structures designed to protect profitability even if market conditions soften.

Analysts say those agreements benefit both sides. Customers gain guaranteed access to critical memory supplies, while Sandisk gains greater visibility into future revenue and production planning.

There is also evidence that the company is better positioned to weather future downturns. In past semiconductor cycles, memory manufacturers often continued producing chips even when prices fell sharply because they needed cash flow. Improved margins and stronger contracts now give Sandisk more flexibility to reduce production if demand weakens.

Industry forecasts suggest NAND memory pricing could remain firm through 2026 and into the first half of 2027, supporting continued profitability across the sector.

For consumers, the story extends beyond Wall Street. The same supply shortages helping Sandisk can also increase costs for smartphones, laptops, solid-state drives, and cloud-computing services. When memory becomes more expensive, some of those costs eventually reach businesses and households.

At the same time, investors should remember that expectations have become extremely high. Stocks that rise more than fivefold in a single year can react sharply to even minor disappointments.

The bottom line: analysts increasingly view Sandisk as one of the clearest beneficiaries of the AI infrastructure boom. As long as demand for data storage continues to outpace supply, the company appears positioned to remain one of the technology sector’s biggest winners.

JBizNews Desk — Technology

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