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Western Digital: The Vault That AI Can’t Live Without — And Whether You’re Paying Too Much for It
The Hedge | February 2026
Everyone is obsessed with the brains of AI. Nvidia gets the headlines. AMD gets the fanboy debates. Microsoft and Google get the strategy pieces. But nobody talks about where all that AI data actually lives — permanently, cheaply, at scale. That’s Western Digital’s business, and right now Wall Street has suddenly figured it out.
The stock is up roughly 970% in the past year. It hit an all-time high of $309 just last week. It’s currently trading around $270. The question every serious investor needs to answer right now is simple: is this still a buy, or did you already miss it?
What Western Digital Actually Does
Western Digital makes hard disk drives and, until recently, NAND flash memory through its Sandisk division. The company just spun off Sandisk, so what you’re buying today when you buy WDC is essentially a pure-play HDD business — the largest in the world alongside Seagate.
That might sound boring. Hard drives have been around since the 1950s. Your grandfather had one. But here’s what most people miss: the AI revolution has made hard drives more relevant, not less.
Here’s why. Every time you interact with ChatGPT, every time a self-driving car processes a day’s worth of sensor data, every time a data center trains a new model — that data has to live somewhere. SSDs are fast but expensive. You can’t store an exabyte of training data on SSDs without spending a fortune. Hard drives store that data for a fraction of the cost.
Western Digital delivered 215 exabytes of storage to customers in its most recent quarter alone — a 22% increase year over year. Cloud and AI data centers accounted for 89% of total revenue. This isn’t a consumer electronics story anymore. It’s pure infrastructure.
The Business Is Actually Performing
Let’s look at the numbers, because the story isn’t just hype.
Last quarter Western Digital reported revenue of $3.1 billion — up 25% year over year and beating estimates by over 6%. Gross margins came in at 46.1%, up 770 basis points from the same period a year ago. Operating income crossed $1 billion. Free cash flow was $653 million. The company just authorized an additional $4 billion in share buybacks.
For next quarter they’re guiding to $3.2 billion in revenue and gross margins of 47-48%. The trajectory is clearly up.
CEO Irving Tan has made no secret of the strategy: AI is the company’s core growth engine, and the company is investing heavily in next-generation HDD technology — specifically HAMR (Heat-Assisted Magnetic Recording) and ePMR — which dramatically increases storage density per drive. More data per drive means lower cost per byte for the data center, which means more demand for WDC drives.
This is not a turnaround story. This is a company that was nearly left for dead in the 2022-2023 storage cycle downturn — when the stock was trading under $30 — that has emerged leaner, more focused, and positioned at the center of the most powerful infrastructure buildout in a generation.
The AI Storage Thesis in Plain English
Here is the simplest version of why WDC matters for AI:
GPUs are useless without data. Training a large language model requires feeding it enormous amounts of text, images, and video — often hundreds of petabytes. Running that model after training (inference) requires fast retrieval of parameters that can be tens or hundreds of gigabytes. And storing all the outputs, logs, user interactions, and retraining data requires cheap, reliable, high-capacity storage that runs 24 hours a day.
The ratio that matters: for every dollar spent on compute in an AI data center, roughly ten to twenty dollars gets spent on storage infrastructure. The GPU gets the glory. The hard drive does the work.
Western Digital and Seagate essentially operate a duopoly in enterprise HDD. When Microsoft, Google, Amazon, and Meta build out data centers — and they are spending hundreds of billions doing exactly that — there are exactly two companies they can call for the drives. Western Digital is one of them.
Is It Overpriced Right Now?
Here’s where honest analysis requires stepping back from the enthusiasm.
The stock hit $309 eight days ago and is already back to $270 — a 12% pullback in under two weeks. That’s a warning sign worth taking seriously.
Morningstar, which is generally conservative in its estimates, has a fair value of $238 on WDC and rates it a one-star stock — meaning they think it’s significantly overvalued at current prices. Their concern is structural: the HDD market is fundamentally cyclical and commodity-like. When the cycle turns — and it always does — margins compress fast and the stock gets crushed. They watched it happen from 2022 to 2023 when WDC fell from $75 to under $30.
The more bullish Wall Street consensus has a median price target of $325, with some analysts going as high as $440. Twenty analysts have it rated Buy and zero have it rated Sell. That kind of unanimity should always make a disciplined investor slightly nervous — Wall Street tends to pile on after a run, not before it.
At $270 the stock trades at roughly 27 times trailing earnings. That’s not crazy for a high-growth infrastructure name, but it’s not cheap either — especially for a business that can see earnings evaporate quickly when storage pricing softens.
The Sandisk sale adds another wrinkle. Western Digital just sold a $3.17 billion stake in Sandisk — the flash memory business it spun off. That’s a significant capital event that tells you management sees value in monetizing that position now. Whether that’s a vote of confidence in the core HDD business or a signal that they’re taking chips off the table is a legitimate question.
The Bottom Line
Western Digital is a real company with real earnings, a genuine competitive moat, and a structural tailwind that isn’t going away. The AI data center buildout is not a fad — it is a multi-decade infrastructure investment that requires more storage every single year. WDC is one of two companies that can supply it at scale.
But the stock has run almost 1,000% in a year. It just made an all-time high and pulled back 12% in eight days. Morningstar thinks fair value is $238 — 12% below where it’s trading today. The cycle risk is real: this industry has a history of brutal downturns when supply outpaces demand.
The honest answer is this: the long-term thesis is solid but you are not getting this cheap. If you are a long-term investor who can hold through a potential 30-40% drawdown when the next storage cycle correction hits, WDC at $270 is probably still a reasonable entry with patience. If you need to be right in the next six months, the risk/reward is less clear.
For options traders — and this is a name worth watching for a collar position — the implied volatility after a 970% run means premium is rich. The put protection is expensive but the call income is also elevated. It’s a name worth putting on the watchlist for when the next meaningful pullback gives you a better cost basis.
The vault that AI can’t live without is real. The price you pay for the vault still matters.
The Hedge publishes systematic trading commentary and analysis for disciplined investors. Nothing in this post constitutes financial advice. Do your own due diligence.