Sandisk (NASDAQ:SNDK) stock is down 5% in Friday afternoon trading, with shares falling below $740 after closing Thursday at $772.09. The pullback comes after a week where SNDK gained nearly 25%, making today’s move look more like a breather than a breakdown.
Signals from Micron Technology‘s (NASDAQ:MU) earnings are weighing on the broader memory sector. Besides, after a 1,200% gain over the past year for SNDK stock, profit-taking was always going to find a reason to show up.
Multiple Catalysts, One Pullback
The Micron overhang is having an impact on Sandisk. Micron reported earnings this week and highlighted aggressive capital expenditure plans alongside long lead times for new production capacity.
For SNDK bulls, aggressive capex from a competitor eventually means more supply in the NAND flash market. That supply concern, even if it plays out years from now, is enough to shake near-term confidence in the memory trade.
Then there’s the simple math of the rally itself. Sandisk stock is up 208% year-to-date; a stock moving that fast accumulates traders who are sitting on large short-term gains and need very little excuse to take them off the table.
The Fundamentals Behind the Frenzy
Sandisk’s most recent quarter made the bull case hard to dismiss. Revenue of $3.025 billion came in well above expectations, up 61% year-over-year, driven by genuine demand acceleration rather than financial engineering.
The EPS beat was similarly decisive, with results nearly doubling the analyst consensus. It’s a signal that the company’s cost structure is scaling faster than Wall Street had modeled.
That operational leverage translated into free cash flow of $980 million for the quarter, giving Sandisk real capital to reinvest in the AI storage buildout at exactly the moment hyperscaler demand is accelerating.
The datacenter segment is where the AI story lives most directly. That business grew 76% year-over-year as hyperscalers accelerated enterprise SSD deployments. Sandisk CEO David Goeckeler showed confidence on the earnings call:
“This quarter’s performance underscores our agility in capitalizing on better product mix, accelerating enterprise SSD deployments, and strengthening market demand dynamics, all at a time when the critical role that our products play in powering AI and the world’s technology is being recognized.”
Looking ahead, Sandisk’s guidance for next quarter calls for revenue of $4.4 billion to $4.8 billion with non-GAAP EPS of $12 to $14. That’s a significant sequential revenue jump at the midpoint.
If Sandisk hits those numbers, analysts note the current valuation would be more in line with growth expectations. A miss, however, could send shares sharply lower given how far they have run. That is the tension the market is pricing today. For more on what’s been driving the memory sector, see SanDisk Climbs as Sector-Wide Memory Shortage Fuels Fresh Investor Optimism.
Bulls, Bears, and the Bubble Question
Analyst sentiment skews bullish for SNDK stock. The analyst consensus sits at 14 buy or strong buy ratings against 6 holds and zero sells. KGI Securities maintains a price target of $992, well above where shares trade today. The average analyst target is $761, which means today’s price is actually trading above the consensus, not below it.
That last point matters for the bubble debate. Trading above the average analyst target after a 1,270% run means the market has already priced in more optimism than the professional consensus supports. That gap closes either through earnings delivery or price correction.
NVIDIA‘s (NASDAQ:NVDA | NVDA Price Prediction) GPU buildout is driving NAND flash demand in ways that are genuinely structural. The memory shortage analysts have flagged is real. Yet, real demand cycles in semiconductors have a history of attracting supply faster than bulls expect, which is exactly what Micron’s capex commentary is hinting at.
Reddit traders in r/options have maintained a bullish sentiment score of 72 through today’s decline, suggesting retail conviction has not cracked. Moreover, institutional ownership stands at 82% for Sandisk stock.
All in all, today’s pullback is tied to specific, identifiable catalysts. Whether it becomes something more depends on whether Sandisk’s next earnings report delivers on the company’s ambitious forward guidance.