Today: 28 June 2026
Western Digital stock set for Tuesday spotlight after CEO says 2026 HDD output is “pretty much sold out”
16 February 2026
2 mins read

Western Digital stock set for Tuesday spotlight after CEO says 2026 HDD output is “pretty much sold out”

New York, Feb 16, 2026, 13:12 EST — The market is closed.

  • U.S. markets remain closed Monday for Washington’s Birthday. Trading picks back up on Tuesday.
  • Over the weekend, CEO Irving Tan said most hard-drive capacity for 2026 is already spoken for, reports noted.
  • Up next: the Morgan Stanley TMT conference has a slot on March 3, followed by the ex-dividend date on March 5.

Western Digital could grab attention when U.S. markets open Tuesday, after a tech report over the weekend spotlighted CEO Irving Tan’s remarks to investors that the company is “pretty much sold out” of hard drives for 2026. The report noted Tan pointed to solid purchase commitments from Western Digital’s top seven customers, along with longer-term deals running through 2028. The Verge

With U.S. stock markets shut Monday for Washington’s Birthday, traders will have to wait for their first shot at pricing in the latest comments. The pause comes as investors keep a close watch on supply cues, especially in chips and hardware linked to AI data center spending.

Western Digital slipped 0.9% to close at $281.58 on Friday, having bounced from as low as $266.46 up to $289.66 during the session. After hours? The stock was recently quoted at $281.40, data from StockAnalysis show.

Tom’s Hardware reported that Tan made his comments during the company’s fiscal Q2 earnings call, highlighting that long-term deals are set with both volume and pricing locked in — and those volumes, measured in exabytes, reflect just how massive the digital storage demand is. The publication also referenced an investor-relations exec, who noted cloud business accounted for most of the quarter’s revenue, making it clear: the company’s results are closely tied to major data-center clients.

Western Digital’s company profile describes it as a developer and seller of data storage devices and solutions, with its hard disk drives reaching into cloud, client, and consumer markets.

That “sold out” comment? It signals just how scarce high-capacity drives might get for the big data center buyers. When customers start snapping up supply ahead of time, price comes into play fast — and the real test is whether Western Digital can nudge prices higher through contracts without ceding ground to rivals.

HDDs lag behind solid-state drives in speed, but with lower per-terabyte pricing, they remain the go-to for long-term storage. Cheap storage is the selling point that keeps hyperscalers and cloud players stocking up for cold storage, backups, and sprawling training datasets—the less flashy infrastructure powering AI in the background.

There’s a catch for Western Digital: it could easily slip into single-theme territory. Any stumble in cloud capex, a quick loosening of component bottlenecks, or just a change in who’s buying could derail the narrative—even if demand holds up.

Western Digital plans a management appearance at the Morgan Stanley Technology, Media & Telecom Conference on March 3, with a webcast set for the session.

The next dividend from the company goes ex-dividend on March 5, with payment set for March 18, its dividend history shows.

When markets reopen Tuesday, the focus lands on whether capacity headlines can actually spark fresh buying—or just get lost in the wider tech shuffle. Next up: March 3, when the conference appearance could bring updates on pricing, supply, and customer demand.

Khadija Saeed is a financial markets reporter at TS2.tech, specializing in stocks, technology and emerging industries. She studied economics and finance at the London School of Economics and previously worked in market research before moving into financial journalism. Her coverage focuses on the companies, innovations and economic trends influencing global investors.

Stock Market Today

  • Crypto Analyst Predicts 50x Surge for Aave, Outperforming Bitcoin by 2030
    June 28, 2026, 10:17 AM EDT. Bitcoin has declined over 50% since its October peak, amidst concerns about a crypto "Ponzi scheme" collapse. Geoff Kendrick, head of crypto research at Standard Chartered, forecasts a 50-fold surge in Aave's price-from $70 to $3,500-by 2030, positioning it to outperform Bitcoin and Ethereum. Aave, a major decentralized finance (DeFi) lending protocol with $12.4 billion locked in assets, suffered a $300 million exploit in April but remains a key player in DeFi, an emerging area Kendrick calls the next source of "generational wealth." He also predicts Bitcoin will reach $100,000 by 2026 and Ethereum $4,000. This highlights investor shifts towards DeFi amid faltering high-growth tech stocks and gold.

Latest articles

Ondas (NASDAQ:ONDS) drops 15% in volatile week after resale filing

Ondas (NASDAQ:ONDS) drops 15% in volatile week after resale filing

28 June 2026
Ondas Inc. (NASDAQ:ONDS) plunged 15.5% last week to $7.83 despite joining the Russell 3000 Index and announcing $40M+ in new defense orders; a June 26 filing registered 3.38M acquisition shares for resale, equal to 0.64% of shares, setting up a key test of real demand versus supply as index-driven volume fades ahead of the July 3 market holiday.
NVDA selloff drags $74 billion equity stake into spotlight

NVDA selloff drags $74 billion equity stake into spotlight

28 June 2026
Nvidia plunged 8.6% last week to $192.53, wiping out about $443 billion in equity value, as chip stocks suffered their worst week since April and Nvidia’s massive equity investment book added new risk to quarterly results; a further drop to $189.23 would mark a 20% slide from its May high.
AAPL volume spikes as QQQ faces memory squeeze risk

AAPL volume spikes as QQQ faces memory squeeze risk

28 June 2026
Apple (AAPL) surged 3.14% Friday on massive volume after a weeklong slide, but still lost $209 billion in value as memory chip price hikes forced iPad and MacBook increases; investors face margin pressure, supply-chain risks, and a short trading week with Apple now trading more on memory costs than iPhone cycles.
US Economic Calendar Today: Stock Futures Hold Steady as Traders Eye Fed Speeches, Treasury Buyback and Delayed Jobs Data
Previous Story

US Economic Calendar Today: Stock Futures Hold Steady as Traders Eye Fed Speeches, Treasury Buyback and Delayed Jobs Data

Uber stock: Tuesday test looms after Uber Eats targets $1 billion boost in Europe
Next Story

Uber stock: Tuesday test looms after Uber Eats targets $1 billion boost in Europe

Go toTop