Stanley Druckenmiller executed a strategic exit from his SanDisk holdings after securing a remarkable 400% profit within a three-month window. Rather than signaling a departure from AI-related investments, this maneuver represented a tactical reallocation within the artificial intelligence infrastructure ecosystem.
Through his Duquesne Family Office, Druckenmiller offloaded all 166,235 SanDisk shares. The SanDisk investment had proven exceptionally timely. Following its February 2025 separation from Western Digital, the standalone entity benefited from explosive demand for NAND flash storage as AI infrastructure scaled rapidly. Cloud hyperscalers constructing massive training facilities required substantial storage capacity, and SanDisk delivered precisely that solution. The equity appreciated dramatically.
However, quadruple-digit returns in a single quarter typically embed significant future expectations. Memory semiconductor markets are inherently cyclical. Druckenmiller evidently concluded that the most accessible profits had been captured.
Druckenmiller channeled proceeds into Bloom Energy, a specialist manufacturer of solid-oxide fuel cell systems that transform natural gas into electrical power. Since its 2018 public debut, the stock has appreciated over 800%.
Bloom Energy Corporation, BE
The investment thesis is compelling. Artificial intelligence compute facilities demand massive electrical infrastructure. The top five AI hyperscalers have collectively announced up to $720 billion in capital deployment plans for 2026, predominantly focused on expanding data center footprints. Traditional grid interconnection processes require multi-year regulatory approval cycles, creating substantial infrastructure constraints.
Bloom Energy’s fuel cell technology can be deployed on-site, circumventing grid dependency altogether. This capability provides data center operators with reliable, on-demand power generation without enduring lengthy utility approval processes.
The company has already secured commercial agreements with Oracle, CoreWeave, and Equinix to install its systems across forthcoming data center developments.
Bloom Energy’s first quarter 2026 financial results, released April 28, delivered substantial upside surprises. Revenue totaled $751.1 million, marking 130% year-over-year expansion and crushing the $531.3 million analyst consensus. Earnings per share reached $0.44, vastly exceeding the $0.09 estimate.
Management elevated full-year 2026 earnings guidance to a range of $1.85–$2.25 per share, attributing the increase to accelerating data center deployments and strengthening Oracle collaboration.
Analyst responses came swiftly. BTIG established a $295 price target with a buy recommendation. RBC Capital Markets lifted its target to $335 with an outperform rating. UBS initiated coverage at $251 with a buy rating. The consensus analyst rating stands at “Moderate Buy,” though the $194.95 average price target now trails the current trading price significantly.
Vanguard demonstrated continued conviction, acquiring an additional 45,557 shares during Q4, elevating its total position to 20.85 million shares—approximately 8.82% of outstanding shares—valued at roughly $1.81 billion.
Goldman Sachs amplified its Bloom Energy exposure by 50.3% in Q1, purchasing 836,810 additional shares.
Skepticism persists among certain analysts. JPMorgan maintains a $267 target, TD Cowen projects $235, and Wells Fargo established $217—all below current market levels. Several analysts have highlighted valuation concerns, noting that elevated forward multiples leave limited margin for execution missteps or margin compression.
Insider transaction data introduces additional complexity. Over the preceding 90 days, company insiders divested 455,092 shares totaling approximately $78.6 million in proceeds.
Bloom Energy shares opened Thursday trading at $287.41, approaching the 52-week peak of $290.50.
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