SanDisk posted one of the strongest quarters in its history Thursday, with revenue and earnings blowing past Wall Street forecasts. But the stock still slipped in premarket Friday, down roughly 5%, even as the company laid out a bullish path forward.
Q3 revenue hit $5.95 billion, up 251% from a year ago. That topped analyst estimates of $4.73 billion by a wide margin. Adjusted EPS came in at $23.41, beating the consensus of $14.66 by nearly $9 per share.
The stock had climbed to around $1,096.51, near its 52-week high of $1,115, before pulling back.
Sandisk Corporation, SNDK
Datacenter was the clear engine of growth. Datacenter revenue surged 233% quarter-over-quarter, helped by a 137% jump in pricing across all segments. Consumer and client segments declined, but datacenters more than picked up the slack.
SanDisk signed five multi-year deals during and just after the quarter. Three were inked during Q3, with two more closing in Q4. The three Q3 deals alone are expected to generate at least $42 billion in contractual revenue, recorded quarterly.
There’s also a protection layer built in. SanDisk is guaranteed $11 billion in payments if customers exit their capacity commitments — a key backstop if the market turns.
Pricing has been a tailwind across the board. AI-driven supply tightness in NAND memory has let SanDisk push prices higher, and the upcoming launch of BiCS8-based QLC enterprise SSDs is expected to keep that momentum going.
Wall Street wasted no time upgrading its targets.
BofA Securities raised its price target to $1,550 from $1,080, maintaining a Buy rating. The firm cited valuation upside, undervalued joint venture assets, and expected enterprise SSD market share gains in 2026.
Raymond James raised its target to $1,470 from $725, calling the datacenter inflection “clear” and praising the deepening customer relationships.
Mizuho lifted its target to $1,220 from $1,000 and kept an Outperform rating.
Despite the enthusiasm, InvestingPro flagged the stock as appearing overvalued relative to its Fair Value — though analysts forecast full-year earnings of $44.72 per share.
For Q4, SanDisk guided revenue of $7.75B to $8.25B, with non-GAAP diluted EPS expected between $30.00 and $33.00. That guidance projects roughly 35% revenue growth quarter-over-quarter. Gross margins for Q4 are expected to hit around 80%, up from the 74% consensus and up roughly 5,400 basis points year-over-year.
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