Company Overview

Western Digital is one of the great misunderstood stories in the technology market. Most investors think of it as a legacy hard disk drive maker — a company that makes the spinning mechanical drives that flash storage was supposed to make obsolete. That mental model is approximately five years out of date, and last week it cost anyone holding that view dearly. Western Digital stock closed Monday at $653.53, up 16% on the day and finishing as the top performer in the S&P 500, after Morgan Stanley raised its price target 33% to $650 and called the company one of its most-favored Overweights in the storage sector. On Tuesday, the stock surged further to an intraday all-time high of $730.98 before consolidating. Over the past year, Western Digital has climbed 1,036% — one of the most dramatic turnarounds in the S&P 500.

The reason is counterintuitive and worth understanding. AI data centers don’t just need GPU clusters and HBM memory — they need enormous amounts of storage to hold the datasets, model weights, training checkpoints, and inference outputs that large language models generate. Hard disk drives, despite being older technology than flash, offer dramatically more capacity per dollar than SSDs at the scales AI data centers operate. Morgan Stanley’s report, compiled after three weeks of intensive Asian market visits including the Taiwan AI Summit, COMPUTEX, and Western Digital’s own Asia roadshow, concluded that the global HDD shortage cycle will persist well beyond prior estimates — through at least 2028 — with supply falling 10% to 15% short of demand in 2026 alone. When supply runs structurally short of demand, pricing power follows — and Western Digital’s entire 2026 production is already spoken for.

Key Technical and Fundamental Drivers

2026 Production Sold Out → Binding Hyperscaler Contracts
In February, CEO Irving Tan confirmed Western Digital was “pretty much sold out for calendar 2026” with firm purchase orders from its top seven customers — major cloud hyperscalers who have locked in supply ahead of what they anticipate to be a prolonged shortage. When a manufacturer’s entire annual production is under binding contracts before the year is half over, pricing discipline is structurally enforced rather than competitively negotiated. JPMorgan analyst Samik Chatterjee noted that Seagate — Western Digital’s primary HDD competitor — has stopped offering discounts to incentivize adoption of next-generation products, a sign that supply constraints have eliminated the need to compete on price.

Morgan Stanley: 40–50% Annual HDD Demand Growth vs. 30–35% Supply Through 2028
Morgan Stanley projects HDD demand growth of 40–50% annually versus 30–35% supply growth through 2028, and lifted its Western Digital 2028 EPS estimates 70% above prior consensus. A demand-supply gap of that magnitude, sustained over multiple years, is the mathematical foundation of the pricing power thesis. After spending a week with Western Digital’s management, including CEO Irving Tan and CFO Kris Sennesael, Morgan Stanley stated it has “even greater conviction” in the company’s outlook — language that analysts reserve for situations where management-level engagement has materially changed their model assumptions.

Cluster of Upgrades → Morgan Stanley, JPMorgan, Citi, Mizuho All Moving Targets
Morgan Stanley and JPMorgan sharply raised Western Digital price targets into the mid-$600s, while Citi and Mizuho pushed their targets to $685, all tying the upside to AI workloads and disciplined HDD supply that supports firm pricing. Bank of America highlighted durable AI infrastructure demand, reinforcing a multi-year bull case for WDC across top research desks. A coordinated cluster of upgrades from four major Wall Street firms — rather than a single outlier note — carries substantially more institutional weight and tends to drive sustained repositioning rather than a single-day reaction.

55% Net Profit Margin → Operating Leverage Amplifying the Supercycle
Western Digital carries a net profit margin of 55.03%, placing it among the most profitable American technology companies — a margin structure that means every incremental dollar of HDD revenue in a sold-out environment flows through to earnings at an extraordinary rate. This operating leverage explains why HDD pricing power translates so dramatically into EPS estimates: when nearly half of each revenue dollar becomes net income, a 40–50% demand growth trajectory compounds into earnings estimates that were structurally too conservative before the AI storage boom became apparent.

HAMR Technology → Next-Generation Capacity, Not a Gap
Morgan Stanley analyst Erik Woodring specifically reframed Western Digital’s dual-tracked UltraSMR and HAMR hard drive roadmap as undervalued by investors, describing HAMR — Heat-Assisted Magnetic Recording — as a source of reliability rather than a technology gap. HAMR enables dramatically higher data density per platter, meaning future WDC drives will store meaningfully more data than current generation products without proportionally increasing cost. As AI datasets continue growing, the capacity advantage of HAMR-generation drives represents a product cycle that will extend WDC’s competitive positioning well into the next decade.

Market Takeaway

Western Digital’s move to all-time highs last week is the market pricing in a structural shift that most retail investors haven’t yet internalized: AI data centers are not just buying GPUs. They are buying enormous amounts of hard disk storage to hold the datasets, model weights, and outputs those GPUs process — and the three companies that make high-capacity HDDs (Western Digital, Seagate, and Toshiba) cannot build them fast enough. Morgan Stanley’s finding that supply will fall 10–15% short of demand in 2026 alone, with that gap persisting through 2028, is not a forecast that accommodates modest pricing. It is the precondition for significant pricing power sustained over multiple years.

The honest risk in this setup is significant and worth stating plainly. WDC trades at 39 times earnings after its run, and insider net selling has been flagged by multiple analysts as a concern worth monitoring. The central debate on Wall Street is whether the rally reflects a genuine storage super-cycle or inflated valuations built on AI enthusiasm that has already been fully priced in — and that debate will not be resolved until Micron’s June 24 earnings print provides the next data point on AI infrastructure demand. A stock up 1,036% in a year, trading at 39 times earnings with insiders selling, demands discipline on position sizing regardless of the fundamental conviction behind the thesis. Analysts are watching whether Western Digital can hold above $700 as the key technical level that separates a breakout with institutional follow-through from one that was primarily driven by momentum traders responding to the Morgan Stanley headline. For readers watching Monday’s open, the setup is one of the more dramatic in the technology sector — a company the market classified as legacy hardware that has become one of the most critical suppliers in the AI buildout, with every unit of its most advanced product already sold before it leaves the factory.