Sandisk Stock Trounces the Market in the First Half of 2026. The Easy Gains May Now Be in the Past.

The artificial intelligence (AI) boom has created clear winners across the semiconductor industry, but not all of them build GPUs. Some supply the technologies that make AI infrastructure usable at scale, and few markets have tightened faster than memory and storage. As hyperscale cloud providers race to deploy larger AI clusters, demand for high-performance flash storage has outpaced supply, pushing pricing higher across the industry.
That backdrop has helped one stock separate itself from the rest of the market. Through the first half of 2026, Sandisk (SNDK) ranked as the S&P 500’s ($SPX) best-performing stock. SNDK stock is up more than 645% year-to-date (YTD), extending a rally that has surprised even longtime semiconductor investors.
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AI Demand Is Rewriting the Storage Market
GPUs may capture most of the headlines, but every AI server also requires massive amounts of high-speed storage. Training models and serving AI applications generates enormous volumes of data, making NAND flash memory an increasingly valuable part of the infrastructure stack.
Sandisk is benefiting from two powerful tailwinds at the same time:
|
Company |
Primary Business |
AI Exposure |
Recent Trend |
|
Sandisk |
NAND flash storage |
Enterprise SSDs, AI servers |
NAND pricing rising |
|
Micron (MU) |
DRAM and NAND |
HBM and NAND |
HBM demand outpacing supply |
|
Samsung Electronics |
Memory and storage |
HBM, DRAM, NAND |
Expanding AI capacity |
|
SK Hynix |
Memory |
HBM leader |
AI memory shortages continue |
Unlike DRAM, which has been dominated by demand for high-bandwidth memory (HBM), NAND flash has quietly entered one of its strongest pricing environments in years. Industry data continues to point toward constrained supply and improving contract pricing throughout 2026. Analysts see the shortage lasting into 2028.
Supply Discipline Has Changed the Story
Previous NAND upcycles often collapsed because manufacturers flooded the market with new capacity. This cycle looks different.
The industry reduced wafer production after memory prices fell below profitable levels. As AI demand accelerated, though, supply found itself in a far healthier position.
That shift has translated directly into stronger financial performance. Gross margins have expanded as average selling prices have recovered, while enterprise SSD shipments have become a larger share of revenue than lower-margin consumer products.



