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Western Digital Corp

Exchange: NASDAQSector: TechnologyIndustry: Computer Hardware

Western Digital empowers the systems and people who rely on data. Consistently delivering massive capacity, high quality and low TCO, Western Digital is trusted by hyperscale cloud providers, enterprise data centers, content professionals and consumers around the world. Core to its values, the company recognizes the urgency to combat climate change and is on a mission to design storage technologies that not only meet today’s data demands but also contribute to a more climate-conscious future.

Did you know?

Capital expenditures increased by 39% from FY24 to FY25.

Current Price

$431.52

-0.69%

GoodMoat Value

$117.68

72.7% overvalued
Profile
Valuation (TTM)
Market Cap$146.30B
P/E23.30
EV$101.40B
P/B27.55
Shares Out339.04M
P/Sales12.42
Revenue$11.78B
EV/EBITDA19.26

Western Digital Corp (WDC) — Q4 2025 Earnings Call Transcript

Apr 5, 202613 speakers6,156 words59 segments

Original transcript

Operator

Good afternoon, and thank you for joining us. Welcome to Western Digital's Fourth Quarter Fiscal 2025 Conference Call. This call is being recorded. Now, I will turn the call over to Mr. Ambrish Srivastava, Vice President of Investor Relations. Please proceed.

O
AS
Ambrish SrivastavaVice President, Investor Relations

Thank you, and good afternoon, everyone. Joining me today are Irving Tan, Western Digital's Chief Executive Officer; and Kris Sennesael, Western Digital's Chief Financial Officer. Before we begin, please note that today's discussion will contain forward-looking statements based on management's current assumptions and expectations, which are subject to various risks and uncertainties. These forward-looking statements include expectations for our product portfolio, our business plans and performance, ongoing market trends and our future financial results. We assume no obligation to update these statements. Please refer to our most recent annual report on Form 10-K and our other filings with the SEC for more information on the risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from expectations. In our prepared remarks, our comments will be related to non-GAAP results on a continuing operations basis, unless stated otherwise. Reconciliations between the non-GAAP and comparable GAAP financial measures are included in the press release and other materials that are being posted in the Investor Relations section of our website at investor.wdc.com. Lastly, I want to note that when we refer to we, us, our, or similar terms, we are referring only to Western Digital as a company and not speaking on behalf of the industry. With that, I will now turn the call over to Irving for introductory remarks. Irving?

TT
Tiang Yew TanCEO

Thanks, Ambrish. Good afternoon, everyone, and thank you for joining us today. Let me first begin by welcoming and introducing Kris Sennesael, our new Chief Financial Officer. Kris brings extensive experience and a strong track record as a public company CFO. His leadership will be instrumental as we sharpen our focus on operational execution, accelerate our capital return program, and continue to create value for our shareholders. We are excited to have Kris on board. Let me now walk you through our business update. AI is ushering in the new era of data growth by fundamentally transforming how data is created, collected, processed, stored, and, more importantly, valued. Looking beyond large language models, which have been a key driver of storage needs, the emergence of Agentic AI at scale in multiple industries is creating an increasing need to store unstructured data. Agents customized with domain-specific knowledge will create a significant amount of distinct use cases and generate data at an unprecedented pace. To set a few examples; applications leveraging Agentic AI range from business tools like enterprise chatbots and court development assistance, all the way to agents assisting in engineering, design, and development. Within our own engineering organization, we are already realizing tangible benefits of Agentic AI to help accelerate our product development cycles. These trends are still in their early stages but are expanding rapidly across industries globally. As data becomes more valuable and central to AI-driven innovation, the need to store and retain it at scale grows in parallel. And no storage technology matches the cost efficiency and reliability of HDDs, which remain the foundation of the world's data infrastructure, delivering unmatched value for mass storage in an AI-driven future. Against this backdrop, demand for our products continues to strengthen. We remain disciplined in managing capacity and are addressing long-term market demand through high-quality, reliable, and larger capacity products. Shipments of our latest generation ePMR drives with capacity up to 26 terabytes CMR and 32 terabytes UltraSMR more than doubled quarter-over-quarter, exceeding 1.7 million units in the June quarter. This marks one of the shortest qualification and ramp cycles in our history. The reliability, scalability, and TCO value of our ePMR and UltraSMR technologies that deliver the fastest time to value for our customers are core to our continued success in the data center market. We aim to extend ePMR's strong track record of high yield, reliability, and scalable performance into our next generation of HAMR drives. The feedback from tests at two of our hyperscale customers continues to be encouraging. I am pleased to note that we are ahead of our internal milestones with steady progress in aerial density improvement and continue to focus on increasing long-term reliability and manufacturing yield of our HAMR products. Next, we will transition from testing to qualification stage with these customers, staying well on track for a ramp in the first half of calendar year 2027. Meanwhile, our next generation of ePMR drives will complete qualification in the first half of calendar year 2026. These drives will continue to deliver strong TCO along with the hallmark reliability and predictability, paving the way for a smooth and economically sound transition to HAMR. In addition, the rapid rise of AI is also accelerating our platforms business. Our platform technology enables us to deliver dense systems that extract the full performance and capacity of our drives. This business is building traction with infrastructure providers and is well positioned to support the growing number of native AI companies that don't have their own storage infrastructure teams. Let me now turn to our quarterly results and capital allocation updates. For the fiscal fourth quarter, Western Digital delivered revenue of $2.6 billion, non-GAAP gross margin of 41.3%, and non-GAAP earnings per share of $1.66. Free cash flow for the quarter was $675 million. During the June quarter, we lowered our debt by $2.6 billion via a combination of using cash on hand and a debt-for-equity exchange of a portion of our state incentives. As a result, we have strengthened our balance sheet and achieved a net leverage target range of 1 to 1.5x. We communicated this at our Investor Day in February in less than two quarters. Keeping with our commitment to returning cash to shareholders, we initiated a quarterly cash dividend program and the Board authorized a $2 billion share repurchase program. In our fiscal fourth quarter, we purchased nearly $150 million worth of shares. Looking ahead, while the broader environment continues to be marked with uncertainty related to tariffs, we are seeing strong demand for our products driven by AI and related tailwinds in our business. Our visibility into our customers' plans continues to improve, and we currently have firm POs or LTAs with all of our top five hyperscale customers covering our entire fiscal year 2026. This close collaboration with our customers enables us to plan more effectively and address their growing needs for storage. For the fiscal first quarter of 2026, we expect continued revenue growth driven by data center demand and improved profitability led by the adoption of our high-capacity drives. Let me now turn the call over to Kris, who will discuss our fiscal fourth quarter results and Q1 fiscal year '26 guidance in more detail.

KS
Kris SennesaelCFO

Thank you, Irving, and good afternoon, everyone. I'm honored to be joining you today for my first earnings call as the Chief Financial Officer of Western Digital. Over the past several weeks, I had the opportunity to perform a deep dive into our business and met with many of our valued employees across the company. I also had several meaningful engagements with customers, suppliers, partners, and the investor community. It's been a tremendously energizing experience, providing great insight into our strategic, financial, and operational priorities. It's clear to me that Western Digital is now operating as a strategically focused hard disk drive company. The company is leveraging its technology leadership position, operational excellence, and deep customer engagements to provide innovative solutions to meet the evolving needs of its customers. This provides a strong foundation for growth, profitability, and cash flow generation that creates long-term shareholder value. During the fourth quarter of fiscal 2025, Western Digital delivered very strong financial results. Revenue was $2.6 billion, up 30% year-over-year, and earnings per share was $1.66. Revenue and EPS were above the high end of the guidance range. We delivered 190 exabytes to our customers, up 32% year-over-year, driven by strong nearline shipments and the ramp of our 26 terabytes CMR and 32-terabyte UltraSMR drives. Cloud represented 90% of total revenue at $2.3 billion, up 36% year-over-year, driven by strong demand for our higher capacity in nearline product portfolio. Client represented 5% of total revenue at $140 million, up 2% year-over-year. And consumer also represented 5% of revenue at $136 million, down 12% year-over-year. Gross margin for the fiscal fourth quarter was 41.3%. Gross margin improved 610 basis points year-over-year on a continuing operating basis and was above our guidance range. The improved gross margin performance reflects continued mix shift towards higher capacity drives and tight cost control in our manufacturing sites and throughout the supply chain. Operating expenses were $345 million, slightly above guidance due to higher variable compensation on stronger-than-expected results. Operating income was $732 million, translating into an operating margin of 28.1%. Interest and other expenses were $52 million, a substantial reduction from the prior quarter due to the repayment of $2.6 billion of debt during the quarter. Taking into account an effective tax rate of 9.3% and a diluted share count of 362 million shares, EPS was $1.66, up 22% sequentially. Turning to the balance sheet. At the end of our fiscal fourth quarter, cash and cash equivalents were $2.1 billion, and the total liquidity was $3.4 billion, including the undrawn revolver capacity. During the quarter, we exchanged approximately 21 million shares of SanDisk for debt. As a result, our Term Loan A reduced by $800 million, and we still own 7.5 million shares of SanDisk. In addition, we redeemed $1.8 billion of the senior unsecured notes, resulting in gross debt outstanding of $4.7 billion at the end of fiscal 2025. We strengthened our balance sheet and achieved our target net leverage ratio of 1 to 1.5x as outlined at our Investor Day. Operating cash flow for the fiscal fourth quarter was $746 million, and capital expenditures were $71 million, resulting in strong free cash flow generation of $675 million for the quarter. Backed by strong cash flow generation, a robust balance sheet, and confidence in the fundamentals of our business, the Board authorized up to $2 billion of share repurchases. During the quarter, we repurchased approximately 2.8 million shares for a total of $149 million. In addition, as announced during the last earnings call, the Board initiated a cash dividend of $0.10 per share, resulting in $36 million of dividend payments during the quarter. The Board also declared a quarterly cash dividend of $0.10 per share of the company's common stock payable on September 18, 2025, to shareholders of record as of September 4, 2025. I will now turn to the outlook for the first quarter of fiscal 2026. This guidance includes our current estimate of all anticipated or known tariff-related impacts on our business in this period. We anticipate revenue to be $2.7 billion, plus/minus $100 million. At the midpoint, this reflects a growth of approximately 22% year-over-year. Gross margin is expected to be between 41% and 42%. We expect operating expenses to increase on a sequential basis to a range of $370 million to $380 million, including an additional week of expenses, as Q1 will be a 14-week quarter. Interest and other expenses are anticipated to be approximately $50 million. The tax rate is expected to be between 16% and 19%. As a result, we expect EPS to be $1.54 plus/minus $0.15 based on a non-GAAP diluted share count of approximately 363 million shares. In closing, Western Digital is well positioned to succeed in the AI-driven data economy. We remain committed to meeting our customers' growing storage needs while using our cash flow generation and strong balance sheet to deliver long-term value for our shareholders.

TT
Tiang Yew TanCEO

Thank you, Kris. Western Digital's strong results and positive outlook this quarter reflects the ongoing successful execution of our strategy and the continued trust our customers place in the performance, reliability, and TCO advantages of our products. This combination of customer trust, strategic focus, and disciplined execution is driving our strong financial results. With that, let's now begin with the Q&A. Over to you, Ambrish.

AS
Ambrish SrivastavaVice President, Investor Relations

Thanks, Irving. Operator, you can now open the line to questions, please. To ensure that we hear from as many analysts as possible, please ask one question at a time. After we respond, we will give you an opportunity to ask one follow-up question. Operator?

Operator

The first question comes from Erik Woodring with Morgan Stanley.

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EW
Erik William Richard WoodringAnalyst

And congrats on the results tonight. Kris, I wanted to better understand the gross margin guidance for the September quarter. You're calling for, I believe, 20 basis points of sequential gross margin expansion at the midpoint. Can you help us unpack why we're seeing that sequential gross margin expansion slow into the September quarter, if there are any one-timers or headwinds that are unusual in the quarter to call out? And I'll just ask the follow-up because it's related, which is beyond September; I realize you have a 38% gross margin in your three-year financial model. As we progress through this upcycle, how should we be thinking about the incremental margins in this business and maybe help us dream of what's possible during this upcycle?

KS
Kris SennesaelCFO

Yes. Thanks, Erik, for the question. First of all, I'm very pleased with the progress that we are making with our gross margin. As you probably recall, at the February Investor Day, we announced a business model with a 38% gross margin. In the last quarter, even before I joined the company, I was very pleased to see that the company, for the first time, had gross margins with a 4 handle in the 40% range in the last quarter in Q4 of fiscal '25. I'm very pleased to report that we delivered 41.3% gross margin. So really good progress for many quarters in a row. As you know, in gross margins, there are multiple elements that go into it. There is pricing, the risk mix, and the risk cost. On each of those fronts, I think the company is executing really well. Pricing is in a very stable environment, and the mix is shifting in the right direction to higher capacity drives that are accretive to gross margins. The operational team is executing really well, driving down cost reductions in the factories as well throughout the supply chain. I believe there is further gross margin progression. We guided now Q1 of fiscal '26 to 41% to 42%. I'm confident that the team will execute well and continue to focus on further gross margin improvements over time.

Operator

The next question comes from Aaron Rakers with Wells Fargo.

O
AR
Aaron Christopher RakersAnalyst

I do have two, and I'll wait to ask a follow-up. I guess the first question, Kris, congrats on the results as well. But you've taken the debt down; you're well within your targeted range of 1 to 1.5 on a leverage ratio basis, strong free cash flow generation, you've got $2.1 billion of cash on the balance sheet. I'm curious as you start to think about share repurchase activity going forward, how should we as investors think about that? Or how do you think about excess cash generation or the right level of cash on the balance sheet that you'll operate the business at, or rather the capacity for even stepping further on share repurchase going forward?

KS
Kris SennesaelCFO

Yes, Aaron, that's a great question. And here again, I'm really pleased with what I've seen in the company regarding capital structure and capital allocation. Just to summarize it, there is very strong free cash flow. Just last quarter, the first quarter of the stand-alone hardest drive company, we generated $675 million of free cash flow, which was a 26% free cash flow margin. Now not each and every quarter will be as strong as last quarter, but the business model is really a strong free cash flow business model. In addition to that, the company has done a great job strengthening the balance sheet at the time of the separation, as well as last quarter, where we retired $2.6 billion of debt, now getting to net debt of $2.6 billion, which is roughly onetime LTM EBITDA. So really good job there. There's no hesitation from the Board or the management team to continue to return cash back to shareholders through a combination of our dividend program and the share repurchase program. The dividend program, we started with $0.10 per quarter. I think there is room to grow that dividend over time. We're going to be very thoughtful about that, but there was also no hesitation to switch on the buyback. The day it got approved, you saw we did $150 million. I think over time, as the cash flow generation continues to grow, we can do more, and there will be no hesitation to execute the share repurchase program.

AS
Ambrish SrivastavaVice President, Investor Relations

Do you have a follow-up, Erik? Aaron, sorry.

AR
Aaron Christopher RakersAnalyst

Yes, I do. One of the metrics that you guys have historically provided and helps kind of bridge the hard disk drive versus the non-hard disk drive business was the ASP. I didn't see that in tonight's release. So I'm curious if that's something that you could talk to? Or I guess, maybe put another way, how do we think about the non-HDD revenue in this most recent quarter?

TT
Tiang Yew TanCEO

Yes. Aaron, thanks for the question. This is Irving. Obviously, ASP per terabyte is a function of mix by and large. But I would say for last quarter, ASP per terabyte was down low single digits.

Operator

The next question comes from Wamsi Mohan with Bank of America.

O
WM
Wamsi MohanAnalyst

And congrats on your solid results as well. Could you maybe help us think a little bit longer-term here? When you look at the revenue contribution, with 90% coming from the cloud, does it really mean that the seasonality in the business is going to be materially different? And what I'm particularly wondering is, should we be thinking that you're just going to see sequential growth as demand is kind of strong, still all indications of cloud CapEx remains very strong, and that you could grow through even typically a seasonal weaker quarter like the March quarter? And I have a follow-up.

TT
Tiang Yew TanCEO

Yes. Thanks, Wamsi, for the question. Look, I think you sort of got it well in the sense that we are structurally a quite different business today than we were in the past. As you highlighted, 90% of our business is in the data center. A large portion of that business is driven by a few key hyperscale customers that we have. They have multiyear CapEx programs to really invest in their data storage assets, both to support the ongoing growth in the cloud and to also support the additional tailwind that they see coming from the AI revolution as well. So that, plus the fact that we have now moved to a 52-week lead time program with them. As we've highlighted, we have POs and LTAs for all five of our top customers covering the entire fiscal year '26 and for two of the five, all the way to the middle of fiscal year '27. We don't think that the seasonality of the past applies anymore. It's really driven by the cloud CapEx spend of the big hyperscalers in terms of their new data center deployments and the refresh cycles as well. Having said that, we do recognize that we are in a cyclical business. At some point, those cycles will include periods of digestion, as we highlighted in our Q3 results, but we pretty much have a good handle on how the business is slowing over a 12- or 18-month time frame. But if I summarize it, you got it pretty right: the traditional seasonality of the past doesn't really apply to this business anymore. It's really driven by the programs that our hyperscale customers have in terms of new data centers coming online in their refresh cycles.

WM
Wamsi MohanAnalyst

Okay. That's super helpful, Irving. And as my follow-up, Kris, I just wanted to go back to the incremental margin question that Erik asked about, and you answered with the moving pieces being price, mix, and cost. If we think about the sequential improvement in this June quarter of 120 basis points, what would you say was the biggest driver between those three elements? And as we look forward, where do you see the most opportunity? I would think that the pricing is what it's going to be. It's pretty stable, not maybe a huge incremental driver. So should we think that mix is really the biggest contributor on a go-forward basis as you mix up these UltraSMR drives? Or should I be thinking about it differently?

KS
Kris SennesaelCFO

No. You have it right. Mix is the most important item that we as a company focus on. That's why we continue to invest in our technology and product roadmaps and really focus on higher capacity drives. That is something that our customers are asking for. That's something we are working and collaborating with our customers on, and it's a win-win situation. For us, higher capacity drives typically translate into higher gross margin. The company is executing really well on that.

TT
Tiang Yew TanCEO

Maybe Wamsi, this is Irving. I'll add to what Kris mentioned. I completely agree that our results are largely driven by the product mix. In the second quarter, we saw our shipment of the latest generation ePMR drives, specifically the 26-terabyte CMR and 32-terabyte UltraSMR models, double from over 800,000 units last quarter to more than 1.7 million units this quarter. This growth indicates that our customers recognize the total cost of ownership value, the strong reliability, and the quality they're accustomed to from our ePMR drives. As I've mentioned before, these drives not only represent leading capacity points, but our operations team also achieves high yields, contributing to the profitability of that segment. We are excited about introducing our next-generation ePMR drives soon. I believe there will be ongoing opportunities for us to deliver value, innovation, and total cost of ownership benefits, leading to further margin expansion.

Operator

Our next question comes from Karl Ackerman with BNP Paribas.

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KA
Karl AckermanAnalyst

So one of the main ways you have driven higher margins is from the adoption of UltraSMR, and I was hoping if you could discuss the adoption curve and willingness of hyperscalers to grow their hard drive base exclusively on UltraSMR. I guess, are there certain workloads where UltraSMR is disadvantaged that would prevent you from attaining perhaps 100% of your fleet on UltraSMR?

TT
Tiang Yew TanCEO

Karl, thanks for the question. Well, we have, in the past, had two key customers on UltraSMR. We've just completed the qualification of a third hyperscale customer out of our top five on UltraSMR and are just starting to ramp UltraSMR in the second half of the calendar year. We now have a fourth customer in the process of qualifying UltraSMR as well. And again, to reiterate, it's very important to note that UltraSMR is a technology that will be extensible into HAMR as well. As we transition into our HAMR products in the not-too-distant future, we will be able to deliver that on the UltraSMR platforms as well to enable our customers to take advantage of the incremental capacity points within that. Specifically, your question around workloads: it really depends on the application. Even in the existing customer environments that do use UltraSMR today, there are some specific legacy workloads that they buy lower capacity drives, 18, 20 terabyte drives. But what we are seeing is that for any new workloads they are bringing to the market, it's all on the highest capacity points that they can adopt, which is typically on UltraSMR.

AS
Ambrish SrivastavaVice President, Investor Relations

Do you have a follow-up, Karl?

KA
Karl AckermanAnalyst

I do, if I may. You have seen the strongest visibility in terms of order rates and really the longest time ever. That clearly speaks to the demand requests from hyperscale customers. Clearly, they would love to have you add capacity given the longer lead times and the sophistication of these customers. How do you balance the visibility with those customers, as well as the demand request for those customers, as you plan your capacity playing, and they could plan their hyperscale build-outs for the next two years?

TT
Tiang Yew TanCEO

Yes. It's a great question. So on the demand signal, I think the first step was really to educate our customers on the long lead times, as the products become much more sophisticated as we move to higher capacity drives. We have highlighted, and they're aware that really the long lead times are driven by the head wafers that we have to produce, which take roughly nine months to produce a head wafer and then three months to convert them into headstacks. So the year lead time on that component alone has been instrumental in driving us to that 12-month LTE visibility. We are now also having conversations with them, as I've highlighted with two of them; we now have 18 months visibility. This partnership gives us a lot of insight into how we need to accelerate our aerial density improvements in our products; this is also a function of why you saw the very rapid take-up of our latest generation of ePMR drives. I think we will see something similar in our next generation of ePMR drives out very soon as well. But again, the focus is on really delivering increased aerial density to our customers through technologies like UltraSMR and OptiNAND. If there's any investment that we need to make into capacity, it's really on the head and media side of our business to support aerial density improvement.

Operator

Our next question comes from Asiya Merchant with Citigroup.

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AM
Asiya MerchantAnalyst

I think in the last call, there was some discussion on tariffs and some potential for enterprise slowdown. Just curious if you have any updates there? And how do we ensure that some of this demand is not just related to tariff pull forward?

TT
Tiang Yew TanCEO

Yes. Thanks, Asiya, for the question. There are two parts to the question. First, on enterprise demand: we called it out as a risk with potential concern that the impact of tariffs might have. We haven't seen that materialize, so obviously, the tariffs and some of the reciprocal tariffs got pushed out as well. We haven't seen that yet. But again, as I highlighted, some of the potential softness in enterprise, which didn't materialize, we would pick up in the cloud anyway because enterprises will move from CapEx to consumption-based models. So we sort of netted off regardless, but we haven't seen any of that risk materialize. In response to your second question about tariffs, it's a very fluid and dynamic situation. We don't see any double ordering based on the analysis we've done. We look at quarter linearity trends, and they're very similar to what we've seen historically. We compare that against the 12-month lead times that our customers have given us either through firm POs or LTAs, and they're matching those projections to the T. Lastly, we're in a very, very tight supply environment. Our ability to deliver upside within a quarter is also very limited. For those reasons, and the fact that we monitor our customer inventory levels the best we can, we don't see any pull forwards as a result of tariffs as of now.

AS
Ambrish SrivastavaVice President, Investor Relations

Thank you for your two questions, Asiya. We'll go to the next caller, please.

Operator

The next question comes from Tom O'Malley with Barclays.

O
TO
Thomas James O'MalleyAnalyst

I just wanted to make sure I heard this correctly. You guys said ASPs in the June quarter were down low single digits. Is that correct?

TT
Tiang Yew TanCEO

So Tom, that is correct. ASPs per drive continue to go up as we move to higher capacity drives, but ASP per terabyte was slightly down, mostly driven by mix because the price environment is very stable.

TO
Thomas James O'MalleyAnalyst

Got it. That makes sense. And then, I guess, as a follow-up, if you look at the market today: I think that your competitor had talked about an exabyte target where after that certain target, I think they said around 160 exabytes, they would need to see growth really exclusively from technology transitions. I asked you last quarter, but in terms of where you guys stand, is there any mark that you would call out as that kind of waterfall? Is there a spot that you would say from this point forward; we only need technology transitions to move forward just in your ability to capacity-constrain the market? Anything you have there?

TT
Tiang Yew TanCEO

Yes. Tom, I would say that if you look at the last quarter, we delivered 190 exabytes, and that's really a result of the latest generation of ePMR drives that we've delivered. Our ability to not only produce higher capacity drives, but our ability to produce them at scale with high yields, I think has really differentiated us. We are laser-focused on continuing to ensure we have high yields of our components, our drives, and continuing to deliver products to our customers at scale. As a result of that, we don't have to make any incremental investments into capacity.

Operator

Our next question comes from Amit Daryanani with Evercore.

O
AD
Amit Jawaharlaz DaryananiAnalyst

I guess maybe to start with, I was hoping you folks would spend a bit of time on how the extra week flows through your P&L and on the revenue and OpEx side? And what's the right OpEx run rate to think about beyond that extra week?

TT
Tiang Yew TanCEO

Yes. On the revenue side, our customers think in quarterly buckets in line with their long-term forecasts and LTAs, and POs that they have placed. So we don't really see much on the revenue side. There might be a little benefit in the consumer retail side of the business; but as you know, that's relatively small for Western Digital. On the OpEx side, however, it is an extra week. It's, I would say, about $15 million of incremental spend that happens in Q1 of fiscal '26. Obviously, looking ahead to Q2, Q3, Q4, that comes out of it as those quarters are normal 13-week quarters.

AS
Ambrish SrivastavaVice President, Investor Relations

Do you have a follow-up, Amit?

AD
Amit Jawaharlaz DaryananiAnalyst

I do. Irving, you initially spoke a good bit about Agentic AI deployment and how that could drive demand for HDDs. If I think about your Analyst Day, you talked about a 20% exabyte growth, mid- to high single-digit revenue growth for the company. As you start to see AI getting deployed, I'm wondering how you think those numbers can move higher, and if there is a way to quantify what kind of tailwind this would provide for your business longer term?

TT
Tiang Yew TanCEO

Yes. Thanks, Amit, for the question. Yes, if you recall what we presented at Investor Day was a base model with 15 exabyte growth. That was primarily driven by the secular growth in the cloud, and we highlighted the potential upside of that 15 exabyte CAGR growth to 23% as a result of an AI uplift. We are starting to see some of that uplift materialize. It’s still early days, but we think that the exabyte growth is more between the 15% to 23% range rather than the base number that we've highlighted. In that model that we presented at Investor Day, we also had a 7% ASP decline. As Kris highlighted, we're seeing a much lower ASP decline in the low single digits as well. So as we see exabyte growth trend more to that level and ASP is in the low single digits, there's definitely opportunity for revenue growth from a CAGR perspective to go from the mid- to high single-digit range that we highlighted at Investor Day to trend more towards the mid-teens. If you take that mid-teens revenue growth with the OpEx levels that we've highlighted, we will probably be at an OpEx level of 10% of OpEx to revenue. So hopefully, that gives you a sense of bridging what we shared at Investor Day and the changing outlook that we see in the business as a result of the AI tailwinds that we're beginning to highlight.

Operator

Our next question comes from Ananda Baruah with Loop Capital.

O
AB
Ananda Prosad BaruahAnalyst

Could you remind us of the aerial density roadmap from here until HAMR? And where do you think you will be in terms of aerial density if you execute according to the first half of the 2027 roadmap? What are your expectations for aerial density at that point?

TT
Tiang Yew TanCEO

Sure. No problem. Our current ePMR product that we've brought into the marketplace is a 26-terabyte CMR, 32-terabyte UltraSMR. We have highlighted in our roadmap that we look to start qualification for our next generation of ePMR, which will be our final generation of ePMR in the first half of calendar year 2026. That will be a 28-terabyte CMR, 36-terabyte UltraSMR. We will start qualification of HAMR in the second half of calendar year 2027 with ramp in the first half of calendar year 2027. As we've highlighted in the past, we feel the 4 terabyte per platter is where we see a crossover point where it makes economic sense to transition to HAMR.

AS
Ambrish SrivastavaVice President, Investor Relations

Do you have a follow-up, Ananda?

AB
Ananda Prosad BaruahAnalyst

I do, Ambrish. This is more of a clarification. You mentioned the Platforms business and the chance to sell dense systems to native AI companies that lack their own infrastructure. Are those the neo clouds? Is that what you mean? How many of those might not have their own infrastructure? I would think some of the larger ones do. Providing some useful context would be helpful.

TT
Tiang Yew TanCEO

Sure. Thanks for the question. We do have one large cloud provider that's buying platforms from us today that's being deployed at scale. We also have quite a significant number of Storage as a Service providers that are leveraging our platforms business as well to deliver those services to customers. As you've highlighted, a lot of the neo clouds’ primary focus is driving compute capabilities, supporting their customers with their LLM development and then really looking at how they can either leverage the cloud or our platform-like systems to meet their storage requirements going forward. We think there's a lot of legs to this business. Obviously, it's early days. It’s very similar to what we saw in the cloud. It starts with compute and then eventually it comes down to storage as we saw even in AI in the mainstream cloud, where it was GPUs first, then HBMs, DRAMs, and eventually, we are seeing that flow through to storage. We think that sort of trend will play itself out in the neo cloud as well and be very beneficial for our platforms business.

Operator

And our last questioner today will come from Mark Miller with the Benchmark Company.

O
MM
Mark S. MillerAnalyst

I'm just wondering, could you quantify the hard drive ASPs in the quarter?

AS
Ambrish SrivastavaVice President, Investor Relations

Sorry, what's the question?

MM
Mark S. MillerAnalyst

What were your hard drive ASPs in the June quarter?

AS
Ambrish SrivastavaVice President, Investor Relations

Yes. As you see the disclosures, this is Ambrish. We have stopped providing ASP per unit because as Irving highlighted earlier, what's more important for our business is EP. Kris, do you want to add to that?

KS
Kris SennesaelCFO

Yes. We provided the units. You can easily do the math, and you will see, I think, a substantial sequential as well as year-over-year growth in our revenue per drive that we have. But again, it depends on the mix of our overall revenue, and for me, that number is somewhat meaningful. Yes, it's trending upwards, again, mostly driven by the move to higher capacity drives, something that we are working on with our customers.

MM
Mark S. MillerAnalyst

And just finally, DSOs for the quarter?

KS
Kris SennesaelCFO

DSO? I don't have it on top of my head, but as a company, we did a really good job managing our working capital. I'm very comfortable with the level of inventory that we have right now, which is around $1.3 billion, that translates into days of inventory of 76 days. The DSOs came down, I believe, 6 days on a sequential basis and is now at 52 days. So again, really, as you know, DSOs are mostly driven by the billing finality within the quarter. As Irving indicated before, that continues to be very strong as well.

Operator

This concludes our question-and-answer session. I would like to turn the conference back over to Irving Tan for any closing remarks.

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TT
Tiang Yew TanCEO

Thank you all again for joining us today and your interest in Western Digital. As our results and guidance show, we continue to make good progress executing on our strategy, and we look forward to sharing more on the exciting innovations we have in the pipeline and the actions we are taking towards creating long-term shareholder value in future calls. Let me close by giving a call-out to all our WD drivers who show up every day, making a difference for our customers, shareholders, ecosystem partners, and each other. Thank you all very much, and have a great day ahead.

Operator

This concludes today's conference call. Thank you for joining. You may now disconnect.

O