
SanDisk stock (NASDAQ: SNDK) jumped nearly 4% on Thursday, a move that stood out in a choppy tape and quickly reignited some familiar questions for traders.
The investors are memory and storage stocks starting a new leg higher, or is this just another fast swing in a volatile corner of semiconductors?
SanDisk stock had actually dipped in premarket on news that its former parent Western Digital was offloading a chunk of shares, but bulls stepped in during the session, and the stock recovered to close up.
SanDisk stock: Technical signals and supply overhang absorbed
The early pressure on SanDisk came from a clear source.
Western Digital announced a secondary share sale of 5.82 million SanDisk shares on Wednesday, priced at $545 each, a 7.7% discount to SanDisk’s prior closing price of $590.59.
The structure was notable as Western Digital is swapping those shares for debt held by affiliates of J.P. Morgan and BofA Securities, using the transaction to chip away at its nearly $4 billion debt pile.
Following the deal, Western Digital retains a residual stake of roughly $1 billion in SanDisk, which it intends to sell eventually.
In plain terms, Western Digital is completing a financial separation from SanDisk, which it spun off last year, while cleaning up its own balance sheet.
Secondary offerings at a discount are often treated as short-term headwinds because they increase the number of shares available in the market. SanDisk slipped about 3% in premarket on the news.
The fact that the stock recovered to a nearly 4% gain on the session is itself a signal.
It suggests buyers were willing to absorb the secondary overhang, treating the post-spinoff share cleanup as a known, bounded event rather than a fresh negative.
Technically, the bounce also tracked constructively as Barchart’s momentum snapshot shows large positive returns relative to multiple moving-average windows, and relative strength readings have improved from weaker levels.
Structural demand: AI data centers need storage
The more durable bull case for SanDisk has little to do with technicals or secondary supply; it runs through AI infrastructure.
SanDisk stock is witnessing a surge after projecting profit and revenue well above analysts’ estimates, citing a “notable rise in demand for data storage fueled by artificial intelligence.”
The company itself had flagged quarterly results above estimates in January, driven by a surge in demand for its data storage products.
That matters because AI doesn’t just require computing power; it generates and moves enormous volumes of data, all of which has to be stored and accessed quickly.
That is why storage names can catch a bid even when the broader semiconductor complex is flat.
The Western Digital offering removes an overhang that had been shadowing the stock, and its quick absorption may have quietly reinforced that the underlying demand story is intact.
https://invezz.com/news/2026/02/19/sandisk-stock-spikes-4-breakout-in-memory-shares-ahead/

