Shares of SanDisk reached a new 52-week pinnacle of $2,175.88 during June 18 trading, climbing 10.9% after Apple’s CEO Tim Cook acknowledged to The Wall Street Journal that higher prices throughout Apple’s product range are “unavoidable.”
Sandisk Corporation, SNDK
Cook’s precise statement: “Unfortunately, price increases are unavoidable.” He noted that Apple had attempted to shield consumers but declared “the situation has become unsustainable.” He went on to liken the memory crisis to a century-level disaster — “I’ve never seen anything like it in any area in over 40 years.”
This represents a remarkably candid acknowledgment from the chief executive of the planet’s most valuable corporation. Financial markets interpreted his words as validation that the NAND supply crunch is genuine, severe, and likely to persist.
NAND flash production is controlled by merely a handful of manufacturers — Samsung, SK Hynix, Micron, Kioxia, and SanDisk — providing each with substantial pricing leverage when demand surpasses available supply.
SanDisk’s most recent quarterly performance validated this dynamic. The company posted $5.95 billion in revenue, marking a 251% year-over-year surge. Data center revenue expanded 233%. Gross profit margins reached 78.4%. These figures are exceptional even within the semiconductor sector.
Management has indicated that all 2026 production slots are completely reserved. Orders extending into 2027 are characterized as vigorous.
Aside from Cook’s remarks, several additional catalysts converged on the same trading day. News emerged regarding a substantial new flash-memory procurement agreement, a broader semiconductor sector rally was in progress, and Morgan Stanley elevated its price objective on SNDK — contributing institutional credibility to the day’s upward momentum.
Both DRAM and NAND pricing have surged over 300% since 2023. Industry analyst firm TechInsights anticipates continued price escalation through 2027. Bringing new production facilities online requires 18 to 24 months, which constrains how rapidly manufacturers can address demand pressures.
SanDisk has also secured long-duration contracts that provide exceptional revenue predictability compared to typical chip manufacturers.
The Nasdaq composite advanced 1.3% during the session, bouncing back from the previous day’s decline. On June 17, the Federal Reserve’s updated interest rate projections delivered a hawkish message, driving the Dow down 0.98%, the Nasdaq down 1.34%, and the S&P 500 down 1.21%. Wednesday’s market recovery amplified SanDisk’s upward movement.
SanDisk is currently executing a share exchange arrangement with Western Digital, scheduled to complete on June 22. This restructuring establishes SanDisk as a pure-play NAND and SSD enterprise concentrated on AI-driven memory requirements.
For the year-to-date period, SNDK has surged 725%. The company’s market capitalization stands at $294.9 billion. Daily trading volume averages approximately 14.8 million shares.
Morgan Stanley’s target price revision represented the latest Wall Street assessment on the stock as of the June 18 trading session.
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