Western Digital (NASDAQ:WDC) moved sideways this week, dipping 0.35% to close at $281.58 on February 13.
But zoom out, and the picture changes dramatically. The stock is up 31% over the past month and 63% year-to-date, riding a wave of AI storage demand that’s reshaping the data center landscape.
While the broader semiconductor sector, tracked by the VanEck Semiconductor ETF (NYSEARCA:SMH), gained 1.51% this week and 13% year-to-date, Western Digital’s outperformance tells a specific story about who’s winning in AI infrastructure.
Analyst Upgrades Signal Confidence in AI Roadmap
The week brought a flurry of analyst price target increases. Cantor Fitzgerald raised its target to $420 on February 6, citing improved growth and profitability expectations. Susquehanna followed with a boost to $285 on February 11. The timing wasn’t random. Western Digital’s Innovation Day on February 10 unveiled an aggressive AI-focused storage roadmap, including next-generation 40TB UltraSMR drives and plans for HDDs exceeding 100TB capacity by 2029.
These aren’t vanity projects. Hyperscale data centers powering AI workloads need massive capacity at economics that work. Western Digital’s focus on balancing speed, capacity, and cost positions it as the infrastructure provider for companies building out AI training and inference systems. The analyst community sees this. 21 analysts rate the stock a buy or strong buy versus just 6 holds and zero sells.
We’ll see if the company’s Analyst Day spurs any more upgrades. Why are Western Digital shares up 63% year-to-date? It’s pretty simple: 30 days ago Wall Street expected $9.91 in earnings in 2027; today, that figure sits at $13.45. If those price targets keep rising, expect Western Digital’s share price to follow.
Memory Shortage Fuels Sector Rally
Western Digital isn’t operating in isolation. The broader memory and storage sector is experiencing a supply squeeze driven by AI demand. SanDisk jumped 70.78% over the past month as memory chip shortages tightened. Micron Technology (NASDAQ:MU) gained 4.3% this week and sits up 44% year-to-date, benefiting from the same tailwinds.
The question investors are wrestling with is sustainability. Market concerns around the long-term sustainability of the AI-fueled memory squeeze emerged this week as some analysts flagged valuation risks. Western Digital’s recent quarter provides evidence this isn’t a flash in the pan. The company posted $3.02 billion in revenue, beating estimates, with non-GAAP EPS of $2.13 versus the $1.94 consensus. More telling was the guidance: $3.2 billion in Q3 revenue, representing roughly 40% year-over-year growth.
As we noted earlier, Wall Street continues to raise expectations not just for this year, but 2027 as well. The longer out there’s visibility, the more Western Digital shares will be able to ‘re-rate’ to higher multiples.
Capital Allocation Signals Management Confidence
On February 13, Western Digital’s board authorized an additional $4 billion for share repurchases. CEO Irving Tan framed the move as part of a capital allocation strategy balancing reinvestment, debt reduction, and capital returns to shareholders. The company also completed redemption of all 4.75% Senior Notes due 2026 on February 9, strengthening its balance sheet.
These moves matter because they signal management’s confidence in sustained cash generation. Free cash flow hit $653 million in Q2, up 127.53% year-over-year. When a company is buying back stock aggressively while paying down debt, it’s betting on its ability to generate excess cash. That’s the bet Western Digital is making on AI storage demand continuing to accelerate through 2026 and beyond.