SanDisk Surges 6.8% to Lead Memory Rebound — Is the Supercycle Back?

SanDisk (SNDK) surged 6.77% to $172.7, leading a broad memory sector rebound. Bullish narratives are regaining traction — media urged investors to "buy Micron and SanDisk like there's no tomorrow" and named SNDK among "the most profitable cheap stocks," highlighting valuation appeal after the sharp prior selloff. The storage sector, however, just endured a supply scare triggered by Samsung, leaving volatility elevated. With dip-buyers flooding in and SNDK up nearly 7% in a single session, is this the supercycle's second launch — or another bear-market trap?

avatarLanceljx
07-10 22:22
A single 6.8% rally is encouraging, but it is not enough on its own to confirm a "second launch" of the memory supercycle. The bullish case remains intact: AI infrastructure demand continues to support high-bandwidth memory, enterprise SSDs, and advanced NAND. If Samsung's supply concerns prove temporary, tighter industry discipline could support pricing again. SanDisk's valuation may still look attractive if earnings continue to improve. The cautious case is equally valid: Memory is one of the most cyclical segments in semiconductors. Sharp rallies after steep sell-offs are common. A 7% gain driven by sentiment and valuation headlines can reverse quickly if NAND pricing weakens or supply increases. The market will want confirmation through future pricing data, customer demand, and earning

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avatarMarvell
07-10 11:15
$Micron Technology(MU)$  it is odd that the ahared sropped woth rhe MOU! Memorandom of Understanding. As oil stocks go up andMU go down. And vice versa. Something to look out for ;)
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07-10 08:23

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07-10 07:39
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07-09 17:37

Memory Chips Are Back in Focus: Is AI Rewriting the DRAM Cycle?

Two memory-chip stories hit the market this week. On one side, SK hynix’s U.S. ADR offering reportedly drew demand more than 7x the available supply, with proceeds expected to support new facilities tied to AI memory demand. On the other side, China’s Changxin Memory Technologies, or CXMT, is moving ahead with its Shanghai IPO book-building, aiming to raise funds for production-line expansion and technology upgrades. Different markets, different paths, but the same underlying question: Is AI turning memory chips from a cyclical trade into a structural AI infrastructure story? For years, investors mainly watched memory stocks through the old cycle: When will DRAM prices bottom? When will inventories clear? When will the next upcycle arrive? Now the questions are changing: Can HBM demand sta
Memory Chips Are Back in Focus: Is AI Rewriting the DRAM Cycle?
avatarzhingle
07-09 13:14
🚀 SanDisk ($SNDK) +6.8% — The Memory Supercycle Is Quietly Returning. Are We Still Early? 💾 SanDisk surged 6.8% today, and I don’t think this is just another random relief rally. After weeks of panic selling driven by supply concerns, the market is beginning to refocus on what actually matters: demand. 📈 The AI revolution isn’t slowing down—it is accelerating. Every new AI model, inference cluster, hyperscale data center, and enterprise deployment requires massive amounts of high-performance storage. GPUs may grab the headlines, but without NAND SSDs to store and feed the exploding volume of data, the AI ecosystem simply cannot scale. 💡 This is why I remain bullish on SanDisk. Unlike previous memory cycles driven mainly by consumer PCs and smartphones, this cycle has a much stronger struct
avatarP.Dwayne
07-09 02:11
$SanDisk Corp.(SNDK)$  let's see if it breaks 1800 by Thu. 
What if Burry was right this time🥹 
avatarJcll
07-07
Who knows better than Lepold and a skilled shorter Micheal Burry ? 
$MU$   Summary Micron Technology, Inc. delivered a record-breaking quarter with Q3 FY26 revenue of $41.5B, up 346% YoY, and non-GAAP gross margin surging to 84.9%. MU's growth is powered by AI data center demand and transformative long-term take-or-pay contracts, securing ~50% of revenue and reducing cyclicality. Management guides for $50B revenue next quarter and $30B in free cash flow for Q4 FY26, fully funding aggressive CapEx from operational cash generation. I estimate MU's EPS at $114 in 12 months, supporting a $1,725/share price target by July 2027 at 15x P/E, with upside potential if growth outperforms.
$SanDisk Corp.(SNDK)$  is a large us based semiconductor manufacturer and retailer of hardware. The recent high share price volatility reflects uncertainty of the outlook for this stock with high variability of forecasts for the value of equity. Further volatility is forecast with new high share price reflecting high profitability of operations 
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avatarGilly87
07-06

Buy the Rumor, Sell the News Hits Memory Stocks Again

Classic “buy the rumour, sell the news” playing out in real time. $SanDisk Corp.(SNDK)$ A new NAND node launch was never going to override positioning and macro-driven profit-taking after a massive run. What matters more is whether AI-driven storage demand actually keeps tightening supply over the next 2–3 quarters — that’s the real supercycle test, not a single product release. Right now this looks more like de-risking + rotation (especially after hot jobs data) than a thesis breakdown. But if DRAM/NAND pricing weakens alongside capex slowdowns, then the narrative gets stress-tested fast. Volatility like this is usually where the conviction gap shows up.
Buy the Rumor, Sell the News Hits Memory Stocks Again
avatarIsleigh
07-05

SanDisk Down 14%: The Supercycle Is Not Over. But It Is Getting Complicated

What actually happened this week is three separate things colliding at once, and they need to be separated before you make any positioning decision. What Actually Caused the Drop The BiCS10 announcement had almost nothing to do with the selloff. The new 10th-generation 3D NAND chip launched on the same day the stock fell 14%. The market did not sell SanDisk because the product is bad. It sold because a stock up 858% year to date has no margin for error when sentiment shifts, regardless of what is on the press release. Three things hit simultaneously. The June jobs report printed 57,000, well below expectations, with prior months revised down 74,000 combined. Weak jobs data raises the question of whether AI capex cycles slow. That question, even when premature, is enough to trigger profit-t
SanDisk Down 14%: The Supercycle Is Not Over. But It Is Getting Complicated
Just go to any electronic gadget stores and you will see how much the price of a 1TB SSD shoots up 400% due to high demand and few flash memory supply. No one knows whether this is just a phase of a revolution due to AI.  Last time flash drives was given as free bies when purchasing any electronic products but now its price becomes like a new gadget.  Lets see how it goes this coming week. Trade well😎

Storage Just Dropped 10%. I Think It's a Shakeout, Not the End of the AI Trade.

The past two trading sessions have been painful for semiconductor investors. $闪迪(SNDK)$ $美光科技(MU)$ The Philadelphia Semiconductor Index has fallen more than 10% in just two days, with every single constituent ending in the red. Yet the broader market tells a completely different story. The S&P 500 has remained relatively stable, the Dow has pushed to fresh all-time highs, and the equal-weight S&P 500 has also continued making new highs. Same market. Two completely different stories. That tells us something important: this isn't broad market liquidation. It's sector rotation. Capital is moving into defensive sectors such as healthcare, consumer staples, and utilities. More than 350 stocks in the S&am
Storage Just Dropped 10%. I Think It's a Shakeout, Not the End of the AI Trade.
A 14% decline is painful, but by itself it does not invalidate the memory supercycle. Memory stocks are among the most cyclical and sentiment-driven names, so sharp corrections after strong rallies are common. The key questions are whether: HBM and enterprise SSD demand remain strong. Customer inventory stays healthy rather than building excessively. Pricing for DRAM and NAND remains firm over the next few quarters. If those fundamentals remain intact, this looks more like a valuation reset than the end of the cycle. If, however, hyperscalers begin cutting AI infrastructure spending or memory pricing weakens materially, then the thesis would deserve reassessment. Rather than trying to call the exact bottom, I would prefer averaging in gradually over several tranches. That captures potentia
Taking a hard look at the actual numbers on $Micron Technology(MU)$ after it wrapped up the session at 975.56. The massive run-up we saw through the middle of June has completely retraced, which leaves us with a highly volatile setup. My plan from here is completely straightforward. On the upside, buyers have to actively reclaim and hold a spot above 1032 to prove that a real recovery is starting. On the downside, my line in the sand is the major support shelf at $950. If the stock drops and stays below 950, the immediate bullish case is completely broken and I am cutting active positions to protect my capital. Keep it simple and CHECKİNG $SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust(SPY)$

Navigating Micron's Drop: Market Correction, Options Strategies, and High-Growth Complementary Sectors

Micron's sharp 10% drop—part of a deeper multi-day slide erasing over 16% of its value—presents a classic stock market paradox. It happened right on the heels of a blockbuster Q3 earnings report where $Micron Technology(MU)$ posted a record $41.46 billion in revenue (up 346% year-over-year) and guided an even stronger Q4. When a company posts the best quarter in its history and the stock plunges, it is a clear sign that the macro mechanics of the market are shifting. Overvalued or Short-Term Correction? It is both. The drop is a sharp short-term correction triggered by peak optimism, but it exposes underlying structural debates about the memory sector's long-term valuation. Several intersecting factors drove this specific selloff: Classic "Sell the
Navigating Micron's Drop: Market Correction, Options Strategies, and High-Growth Complementary Sectors