SanDisk (SNDK) Stock Surges Following Barclays’ $2,300 Price Target and $42B Contract News

Table of Contents SanDisk (SNDK) shares are hovering near their 52-week peak following a significant analyst upgrade from Barclays, which boosted its price objective to $2,300 while elevating the stock’s rating to Overweight. Trading activity showed shares climbing nearly 3% during the session. Sandisk Corporation, SNDK In a research note distributed to investors, Barclays analyst Tom O’Malley described SanDisk as “the most aggressive and structurally innovative in its contracting approach” among memory sector peers. The analyst’s bullish stance comes after disclosures that SanDisk has finalized five-year supply partnerships with several customers representing potential revenues exceeding $42B. Among these, three agreements executed in the most recent quarter establish minimum guaranteed revenues of approximately $42B, with financial backstops surpassing $11B across the five completed transactions. Some agreements extend through 2031. The contract framework incorporates fixed pricing mechanisms in the near term before transitioning to flexible rates, positioning SanDisk to benefit from potential NAND price appreciation. Barclays emphasized that this contracting model represents a fundamental shift in how memory manufacturers distribute capacity while simultaneously minimizing SanDisk’s downside risk. O’Malley further commented that the firm views “memory/storage as the most attractive vertical below accelerators.” In an interview with Nikkei Asia, SanDisk CTO Alper Ilkbahar explained that the AI-driven memory shortage shows no signs of easing. As artificial intelligence models become increasingly sophisticated, their memory requirements expand significantly — not merely their computational needs. Ilkbahar referenced key-value cache architectures, which enable models to retrieve previous input data for accelerated response generation. These systems demand substantial memory capacity. Additionally, certain large language models execute multiple specialized sub-models concurrently, creating additional memory pressure beyond standard GPU needs. SanDisk’s answer to this challenge is High-Bandwidth Flash, abbreviated as HBF. Though High-Bandwidth Memory (HBM) has become ubiquitous in AI computing infrastructure, Ilkbahar anticipates HBF will become the essential technology for AI inference operations. “We believe the next big thing is going to be HBF,” Ilkbahar stated. The company expects to deliver sample dies before year-end, with a complete solution — including integrated controllers — targeted for the following year. Ilkbahar emphasized the unprecedented characteristics of these supply arrangements. While extended purchase commitments have appeared in the semiconductor industry previously, nothing matches the magnitude or obligation level of these agreements. “We would have purchase agreements, but it would typically be on different terms and not ever this long and never committed as strongly as we have right now, that I’m aware of,” he explained. The explosive growth in AI computing infrastructure has created worldwide scarcity across both DRAM and NAND flash segments. Industry researcher Omdia forecasts memory costs will climb by at least 250% between now and 2026. SNDK shares have skyrocketed more than 4,000% during the trailing twelve months and currently trade near record levels. The stock approached the $2,300 valuation threshold cited by Barclays during Tuesday’s trading session.