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Sandisk (SNDK) Stock After Hours Today, Dec. 23, 2025: What’s Driving the Move and What to Watch Before the Market Opens Dec. 24
24 December 2025
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Sandisk (SNDK) Stock After Hours Today, Dec. 23, 2025: What’s Driving the Move and What to Watch Before the Market Opens Dec. 24

Sandisk Corporation (NASDAQ: SNDK) ended Tuesday’s regular session higher and then eased slightly in after-hours trading, as investors digested another strong “AI infrastructure” tape and positioned for a holiday-shortened Wednesday session.

SNDK closed the regular session at $244.90, up about 1.6% on the day, before slipping to roughly $244.46 in extended trading as of early evening in New York.

Sandisk stock after the bell: modest dip, but momentum intact

After the 4:00 p.m. ET closing bell, Sandisk shares traded mildly lower, with real-time quotes showing the stock down a fraction of a percent shortly after the close.

What stands out from Tuesday’s session is how “orderly” the move looked relative to Sandisk’s recent volatility: SNDK traded in a wide intraday band, roughly $234 to $245, and still finished near the top of the day’s range. Investing.com+1

That pattern—strong intraday recovery, limited after-hours giveback—often signals that buyers were willing to defend the stock into the close, even ahead of thin holiday liquidity.

Why Sandisk (SNDK) is moving: AI storage tailwinds meet a record-setting market

Sandisk’s day-to-day action is still heavily tied to the broader AI trade—especially anything connected to hyperscale data centers, storage, and memory.

On Tuesday, U.S. equities pushed to fresh highs, with the S&P 500 closing at a record as mega-cap tech leadership remained firm. That upbeat risk tone matters for Sandisk because the stock has increasingly been treated as a high-beta AI infrastructure beneficiary—strong on the way up, but prone to sharp pullbacks when sentiment cracks.

Tuesday’s macro headlines also leaned “growth-friendly” even as they remained mixed:

  • Q3 GDP was reported at a strong 4.3% annual rate, reinforcing the idea that the economy carried meaningful momentum into year-end.
  • Consumer confidence weakened again in December, reflecting household unease around jobs and income—one reason markets continue to debate how quickly the economy cools in early 2026.
  • Business investment indicators were not uniformly soft; core capital goods orders and shipments posted gains (in a delayed release), a data point that can support “capex + AI buildout” narratives. Reuters

In short: Tuesday’s tape didn’t deliver a single “Sandisk-specific” bombshell, but it did reinforce the macro and market setup that has helped storage and memory names outperform.

Today’s Sandisk narrative: from Western Digital spin-off to S&P 500 component

A big reason Sandisk remains in the spotlight is structural, not just cyclical.

Sandisk returned to public markets in 2025 following its separation from Western Digital and has been one of the year’s standout performers in the storage/memory complex.

That momentum received another credibility boost in late November when Sandisk was added to the S&P 500, a move that can create incremental demand from index-tracking funds and ETFs (the so-called “index effect”). Investopedia+1

And on Tuesday, one of the more widely circulated market recaps highlighted data storage and memory stocks as among 2025’s biggest winners, explicitly tying Sandisk’s surge to enterprise flash/SSD exposure and the AI-driven need for storage throughput and capacity.

Forecasts and analyst outlooks: bullish numbers, wide dispersion

Analyst expectations for Sandisk remain constructive—but not uniform. That matters because when expectations are high, even “good” news can be priced in quickly.

Street earnings trajectory (what analysts are modeling)

Consensus estimates tracked by Yahoo Finance show analysts looking for:

  • ~$13.02 EPS for Sandisk in FY 2026
  • ~$20.68 EPS for FY 2027

Those are aggressive growth assumptions, and they help explain why SNDK has traded more like a momentum name than a sleepy hardware stock.

Price targets: upside in consensus, but not a one-way bet

A snapshot of published targets shows a meaningful spread. Zacks’ compilation shows an average target around the $270 area, with forecasts ranging roughly from the low $220s up to the low $320s.

That wide range is important: it’s a sign analysts disagree not only on Sandisk’s upside, but also on how durable this part of the NAND/SSD cycle will be.

“Super-cycle” framing from recent research

A notable Barron’s report this week pointed to sharply higher revenue and EPS forecasts from firms like Benchmark and Citi, arguing tight supply and strong hyperscaler demand could keep conditions supportive through 2026 and into 2027.

A credible bear case is also circulating

Not all commentary is bullish. A recent Seeking Alpha piece argued Sandisk’s valuation may have run ahead of sustainable fundamentals after the post-spin rally, flagging competitive risks and margin comparisons.

For traders and investors, the takeaway isn’t that one side is “right,” but that SNDK is now priced like a stock that must keep executing—and will likely react hard to any sign the cycle is peaking.

A quiet but notable update today: insider filing hits the tape

One “today” item worth knowing (even if it’s not necessarily a directional signal): an SEC Form 4 filing dated Dec. 23, 2025 reflects shares withheld to cover taxes related to vesting—coded as a withholding transaction rather than a discretionary open-market sale. SEC

These filings can spark headlines, but tax-withholding Form 4s are common and don’t automatically imply bearish insider sentiment.

What to know before the market opens tomorrow (Wednesday, Dec. 24, 2025)

Wednesday is not a normal session—and that can matter as much as any headline.

1) The U.S. stock market closes early on Christmas Eve

Both the NYSE and Nasdaq are scheduled for an early close at 1:00 p.m. ET on Wednesday, Dec. 24, 2025.
That typically means:

  • thinner liquidity after the open
  • wider bid-ask spreads (especially in high-beta names)
  • intraday moves that can look “bigger than the news”

2) Watch 8:30 a.m. ET jobless claims—released Wednesday due to the holiday

Weekly U.S. initial jobless claims are scheduled for Wednesday, Dec. 24 at 8:30 a.m. ET (moved up because Thursday is a federal holiday).

Why it matters for Sandisk: SNDK has traded as a growth/AI proxy at times, and rate expectations can influence multiples quickly—especially when trading conditions are thin.

3) Treat premarket and early trading as “headline-sensitive”

If you trade or track SNDK into the open, expect that:

  • a single macro headline (or a peer-company move) can swing the stock disproportionately
  • breakouts and breakdowns can be less reliable due to holiday liquidity

4) Key reference levels from Tuesday’s action

From Tuesday’s price action, traders will likely key off:

  • ~$245–$245.5 (area near the session high)
  • ~$234 (area near the session low / support reference)

5) Options market pricing suggests room for movement

Near-dated options pricing implies a meaningful short-term expected move (as is typical for a volatile, high-beta name). One options analytics snapshot pegged the expected move into the end of the week at roughly ±$16.71 (about 7%) for contracts expiring Dec. 26.

That doesn’t predict direction—but it helps explain why SNDK can swing several dollars quickly without any company-specific news.

Bottom line for Sandisk stock heading into Dec. 24

Sandisk stock finished Dec. 23 strong in the regular session and slipped only slightly after hours—consistent with a market that remains supportive of AI-linked infrastructure themes, even as investors head into a holiday-shortened session.

For the Dec. 24 open, the “must-know” items are less about Sandisk-specific catalysts and more about market structure: an early close, thinner liquidity, and a potentially market-moving 8:30 a.m. ET jobless claims release. Nasdaq+1

Stock Market Today

  • MercadoLibre (MELI) Shares Down 31% in One Year but DCF Analysis Shows Undervaluation
    June 10, 2026, 12:02 AM EDT. MercadoLibre's (MELI) share price has dropped 31.5% over the past year, closing recently at $1,641.16. Despite this decline, a Discounted Cash Flow (DCF) analysis by Simply Wall St values the stock at roughly $3,085.92 per share, indicating it is about 46.8% undervalued. MercadoLibre remains a key player in Latin America's e-commerce and fintech sectors amid ongoing industry challenges such as regulation and competition. The stock's recent underperformance contrasts with positive free cash flow forecasts to 2035. The P/E ratio and other valuation metrics are also considered to gauge the share's appeal. Investors are advised to weigh these factors alongside broader market and sector dynamics when assessing MercadoLibre's long-term potential.

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