FREMONT, California, May 10, 2026, 08:02 PDT
Penguin Solutions Inc. jumped 13.47% to end Friday at $44.23, marking another volatile session for the Nasdaq-listed AI infrastructure and memory name as traders adjusted for a more robust fiscal 2026 forecast. With U.S. markets shut by the Sunday dateline, that Friday settle remains the most recent regular-session figure.
Timing is everything here. Memory chip prices doubled in Q1, and with AI data centers snapping up supply, they could jump another 63% this quarter, Reuters said Friday. Penguin, a player in integrated memory and AI gear, now faces a dual squeeze: rising costs and a surge in customer interest. HSBC’s Kazunori Ito told Reuters there’s “little prospect” of a quick drop in memory prices. Reuters
Penguin’s numbers pretty much tell the story behind the stock’s reaction. Last month, the company boosted its fiscal 2026 net sales forecast to 12% year-over-year growth, plus or minus 5 percentage points. That’s a jump from the previous target of 6% growth, which came with a wider margin of plus or minus 10 points. The adjusted (non-GAAP) earnings-per-share estimate also climbed—to $2.15, give or take 15 cents. Non-GAAP, in this case, reflects management’s profit after stripping out certain items. CEO Kash Shaikh called memory a “critical scaling factor for AI inference”—that’s the phase where a trained AI model handles live user requests. Penguin Solutions
This wasn’t a straight-line quarter for growth. Net sales in the second quarter slipped 6% from last year, coming in at $343 million. GAAP diluted earnings per share, though, jumped to 58 cents, up sharply from just 9 cents. The sales mix shifted notably: Integrated Memory posted gains, but Advanced Computing dropped off as Penguin exited its Edge business and did not see a repeat of those large hyperscale hardware orders that landed a year ago.
Shaikh is pitching the shift as a jump from AI training toward inference. On the call, he described AI’s pivot “from experimentation to production,” pointing out that inference is “memory-bound and latency-sensitive.” Translation: it’s not just about stacking up more graphics chips—the hardware needs memory right next to the processor, and responses have to be quick.
Penguin is pressing forward on the memory front with its OriginAI and MemoryAI lines. The OriginAI platform slots large memory appliances into NVIDIA RTX PRO 6000 and B300 GPU frameworks. As for the CXL-based MemoryAI KV cache server, it taps Compute Express Link—an industry standard that connects CPUs to expanded memory. The KV cache acts as a kind of working memory, letting large language models keep track of context as they generate responses.
Customer signings like these are critical for Penguin, which remains a minor player in a sector dominated by giants and big spending. Back in March, Penguin announced Deepgram had tapped it to provide the AI backbone for voice technology, relying on Dell PowerEdge servers, Dell PowerScale storage, and NVIDIA’s RTX PRO 6000 Blackwell Server Edition GPUs. “Modern AI workloads demand infrastructure that scales predictably under heavy loads,” said Joe Castillo, Penguin’s vice president of sales. Penguin Solutions
Rivalry in the sector shows no signs of slowing. Dell has launched Nvidia Blackwell Ultra servers aimed squarely at enterprise AI customers. Both Dell and Super Micro Computer are seeing a boost from robust AI server demand, though high production expenses and intense competition are squeezing margins. Super Micro, for its part, has leaned on its tight relationships with Nvidia and AMD to push out new AI servers quickly.
Wall Street isn’t looking past the risks here. Stifel trimmed its Penguin price target to $24 from $27 after earnings but stuck with its Buy call, citing supply issues that dragged on Advanced Computing guidance. Still, the firm pointed to stronger computing bookings and said Penguin is broadening its reach—enterprise, neocloud, sovereign AI customers are in the mix now.
The risk here is clear enough: if bookings are slow to convert, or if parts show up behind schedule, or if memory prices end up favoring suppliers rather than system builders, the numbers could miss. In its filing, Penguin flagged that revenue at Advanced Computing depends on when customers actually deploy and when shipments go out, along with the usual swings in budgets and sales mix. Ongoing AI component shortages, the company added, are still making it hard to source what’s needed and to get systems delivered on time.
Another ownership disclosure turned up Friday: Joseph Clark filed a Form 144, showing 10b5-1 sales that included 5,000 shares moved on May 5, netting $173,750. These Rule 10b5-1 plans are preset trading arrangements—so, on its own, the filing doesn’t signal any shift in the company’s outlook.
PENG stock isn’t acting much like your typical niche hardware play; instead, it’s turning into a direct lever on the whole AI memory crunch. That’s a double-edged sword. The shortage driving the narrative puts real pressure on Penguin to actually get systems shipped when promised.