It’s Sandisk and it has accumulated 3,000%

The thing about Sandisk growth on the stock market It is to study it carefully. Has accumulated almost 3,000% revaluation in the last year, and is another example of how the AI ​​fever and RAM crisis They are shaping the technology industry and markets. And the company that many of us have known for its USB pendrives and memory cards has become one of the companies that will be the most talked about in 2026. lseparation from Western Digital. In February 2025, Sandisk completed its separation from Western Digital and began trading independently on the Nasdaq. For almost a decade, the company had been buried under the umbrella of its parent company, tied to a conventional hard drive business that was growing slowly while the AI ​​sector accelerated and gave wings to the rest of the companies that made critical components for data centers. At the time of going on the market as an independent company, the stock started at around $48. Nothing strange so far. AI once again plays its role in the market. Actually, Sandisk has not invented anything revolutionary now, but everything has to do with the data center storage demand. The flash memory manufacturing company Kioxia warned last January that its supply of NAND for this entire year was already exhausted. And these types of stories are what make companies start looking at alternatives. Data centers dedicated to AI need to store gigantic volumes of data to train models and infer results. When they ran out of traditional hard drives (HDDs), they turned to SSD. And when SSDs also became scarce, prices skyrocketed. According to Kingstonanother manufacturer of flash memory products, NAND prices increased by 246% throughout 2025. Sandisk, being one of the world’s leading manufacturers of NAND memory, found itself at the center of this perfect storm, and in the best possible position. 3,000%. Sandisk’s revenue in the fiscal second quarter of 2026 reached 3,030 million dollarsa growth of 61% year-on-year, while earnings per share multiplied by more than five compared to the same period of the previous year. Revenue from data centers grew 76% year over year in that same quarter, according to the company’s own results filed with the SEC. The company has publicly acknowledged that its factories are working at full capacity. In this way, the accumulated value of its shares has skyrocketed by more than 3,000%, going from just $30 to surpassing the $1,000 barrier in just over a year. The key is in Kioxia. A fundamental part of Sandisk’s competitive advantage is its historic alliance with Japan’s Kioxia, formerly Toshiba Memory. This joint venture of more than twenty years allows them to share the astronomical costs of manufacturing chips, which translates into margins higher than those of most of their rivals. In this way, as we already explained At the end of January, when NAND prices rise, Sandisk does not need to invest in new factories to earn much more, as the additional revenue falls directly into the profit margin. It’s the equivalent of almost free money in a bull market. The data center segment currently represents more than 55% of sales quarterly from Sandisk, compared to the 30% it represented before the split with WD. The entry to the Nasdaq-100. A few days ago, Sandisk joined the Nasdaq-100 indexwhich mechanically forces all ETFs and index funds that track that index to buy shares of the company. This carryover effect has given Sandisk an additional boost to its already flying stock. And now what? The big question is how long this can last. NAND prices they have risen 60% in the first quarter of 2026, with forecasts for another 70-75% increase in the coming months. The CEO of Micron has already publicly declared that the memory shortage will last until 2027. As shared by Ind Money, several analysis firms assure that the crisis could extend until 2028. We will see. As for companies like Samsung, SK Hynix and Kioxia, the triad of memory companies, they plan to significantly increase your production in the coming years in response to the shortage. Cover image | sandisk In Xataka | China has banned another AI startup from exporting talent and research: little by little, it is “nationalizing” AI

Sandisk has risen 1,000% in the stock market since the summer. Its advantage is called Kioxia

In just five months, Sandisk shares have soared 1,000% in one of the most astonishing recoveries in Wall Street history. The company has been the latest big beneficiary of the AI ​​boom and the rush to build data centers full of advanced AI chips… and also the memories that accompany those chips. That’s where Sandisk’s great asset comes in, called Kioxia. Value of Sandisk shares in the last six months. Source: Google Finance. Without knowing it, SanDisk was ready for the revolution. HBM memories were traditionally the favorites to accompany GPUs that were the great “brain” of AI, but the scarcity of these components with high bandwidth has meant that the spotlight has been focused for a few months on DRAM and NAND memories, two types of storage in which sanDisk is a dominant player. Like other manufacturers in its segment —Micron is one of the outstanding—, SanDisk has suddenly found itself in a situation that benefited it enormously. free money. The memory chip market works like a commodity market in which leverage can be significant. That means that when prices rise, companies like SanDisk don’t need to invest in new factories or employees to earn more — although they can build them if they deem necessary. It is as if for Micron or SanDisk this phenomenon is equivalent to “free money” because they are receiving much more income for the same products they sold a year or two ago. Not even they themselves expected it: SanDisk CEO David Goeckeler talked about the rise of AI in June, and commented “We try to estimate demand. We think demand is good. What we need is to get supply to match that.” He couldn’t anticipate what would happen with memories starting in September. DRAM and NAND memory prices are skyrocketing from the end of 2025. Source: Sherwood. The key alliance: Kioxia. In recent times SanDisk has grown significantly in your solid state drive business (SSD) for enterprise data centers. But it also maintains a historical strategic alliance with the Japanese company Kioxia, which allows it to obtain NAND chips at a much lower cost than its rivals. The profit margin skyrockets, and so do the shares on the stock market. A relationship with ups and downs. The relationship between Sandisk and Kioxia (formerly Toshiba Memory) is based on a Joint Venture from more than 20 years ago focused on the development of NAND memories. This alliance has achieved advances such as the memories BICS Flash (with 3D storage technology), the wafers that leave their factories are shared between both companies. Kioxia went through a difficult time after Toshiba’s financial crisis and failed merger attempts with Western Digital. They survived all this, and together with Sandisk now the Japanese company controls 30% of the global NAND market. Some win, others lose. The investment fund Elliot Management pushed in early 2025 for SanDisk will separate from Western Digital. They believed that at that time it was worth about $20 billion—as when he bought it a decade ago—, and that fund sold its stake just before the total market explosion. Today that stake would be worth more than $340 million. Bad business for users. But in addition to that background, the ones who have it most complicated are the users, who will continue to suffer the consequences of this phenomenon for months, and perhaps years. Neither Micron nor Sandisk/Kioxia appear to have any intention of significantly expanding production capacity. They already did this during the pandemic and that caused excess inventory when demand fell after confinement. Now they do not want to expose themselves to the same thing, and there is talk that the price increase will continue throughout 2026 and may let’s take a long time in seeing memories at prices “like those before”… if we end up seeing them. Image | Igor Shalyminov In Xataka | Japan has taken out the checkbook to once again dominate the chip industry. Prepare a plan of 325,000 million dollars

Log In

Forgot password?

Forgot password?

Enter your account data and we will send you a link to reset your password.

Your password reset link appears to be invalid or expired.

Log in

Privacy Policy

Add to Collection

No Collections

Here you'll find all collections you've created before.