Key Highlights
- On April 20, 2026, SanDisk (SNDK) enters the Nasdaq-100, taking Atlassian’s (TEAM) place
- Bernstein set a new $1,250 price target for SanDisk, while Jefferies upgraded to $1,000
- The memory chip maker’s stock has exploded 2,640% in the last year, trading near $855 highs
- A $1 billion strategic investment in Nanya Technology gives SanDisk roughly 3.9% ownership
- Wall Street points to artificial intelligence applications and strengthening NAND pricing as primary growth drivers
The memory storage giant SanDisk (SNDK) is making waves with its upcoming entry into the Nasdaq-100 index. Nasdaq Inc’s Friday evening announcement confirmed that the company will take over Atlassian’s (TEAM) slot when markets open on April 20, 2026.
This inclusion places SanDisk within an elite group of the 100 biggest non-financial firms trading on the Nasdaq exchange — a designation with significant market implications.
Over 200 financial products replicate the Nasdaq-100’s composition, most notably the popular Invesco QQQ Trust. These tracking instruments manage combined assets exceeding $600 billion worldwide, guaranteeing that index funds will automatically purchase SanDisk shares.
Conversely, Atlassian will experience outflows as the same institutional investors rebalance their portfolios. The software-as-a-service provider exits as the index pivots toward companies focused on physical infrastructure and hardware manufacturing.
SanDisk’s addition aligns with existing Nasdaq-100 rebalancing rules, which remain operative until April 30, 2026. Market observers are monitoring potential weighting adjustments before the official April 20 transition.
Wall Street Analysts Elevate Price Forecasts
This index promotion arrives amid increasingly optimistic Wall Street sentiment toward SNDK shares.
Investment firm Jefferies upgraded its valuation from $700 to $1,000 per share while maintaining its Buy recommendation. The analysts highlighted continuing negotiations for extended supply agreements and artificial intelligence adoption as factors supporting additional NAND memory price appreciation and upward earnings adjustments before SanDisk’s April 30 quarterly report.
Jefferies’ Blayne Curtis derived the $1,000 forecast using a 10x earnings multiple against projected 2028 earnings per share of $95.26. The research note also highlighted anticipated QLC eSSD deliveries to major customers during upcoming quarters as a competitive advantage in data center markets.
Bernstein adopted an even more aggressive stance, increasing its target from $1,000 to $1,250 per share. The firm kept its Outperform designation, emphasizing NAND memory pricing that has exceeded industry expectations.
Morgan Stanley reaffirmed its Overweight position after recent memory sector volatility, characterizing the pullback as normal profit-taking rather than fundamental deterioration. Meanwhile, BofA Securities maintained its Buy stance with a $900 objective, highlighting robust demand from cloud computing giants and AI-powered inference workloads.
Remarkable Share Price Growth and Strategic Investments
SNDK’s performance has been nothing short of extraordinary. Shares have climbed 2,640% during the trailing twelve months and currently hover around $851.77, marginally beneath the 52-week peak of $855. According to InvestingPro’s valuation metrics, the stock appears elevated relative to fair value estimates.
Wall Street consensus projects fiscal 2026 earnings at $42.37 per share, with profitability expected throughout the current fiscal year.
On the strategic front, SanDisk unveiled a $1 billion capital commitment to Nanya Technology via private share placement. This transaction secures approximately 139 million Nanya shares for SanDisk, equating to roughly 3.9% of total outstanding equity.
Company executives have not issued revised financial guidance during recent stakeholder presentations.
