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 1st RAM, then SSD, Now HDD Prices

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incubus_skj
post Dec 16 2025, 03:14 PM

oh mai gotto
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soon GPU going to UUU again too
lyekit
post Dec 16 2025, 03:14 PM

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QUOTE(Aivihc @ Dec 16 2025, 02:08 PM)
The good-old "spinning rust"—commonly referred to as Hard Disk Drives (HDDs)—may be another leg in the depleted computing infrastructure caused by the AI boom. According to DigiTimes, contract negotiations for the fourth quarter of 2025 concluded with traditional HDD prices settling about 4% higher quarter-over-quarter, marking the largest rise in the past eight quarters. That is over the largest increase in recent years, indicating that the demand is again outpacing supply even in the slower storage segments like HDD. The massive demand reportedly comes from particularly strong uptake for desktop 3.5-inch drives in China and continued heavy procurement of high-capacity units by major U.S. cloud service providers and hyperscalers.

In China, there is a preference for domestically produced CPUs and operating systems, combined with an increase in local PC assembly, which has brought HDDs back into first-class role in certain PC configurations after years of being replaced by SSDs. Additionally, concerns about SSD data retention have led some customers and policymakers to favor HDDs for specific workloads. Large cloud operators are also expanding their exabyte-class storage for AI, analytics, and archival needs. Manufacturers report that utilization rates are at or near full capacity as demand extends beyond traditional surveillance and backup applications. Especially with AI infrastructure, storing massive data for model training has prompted AI labs to use some HDD-based storage infrastructure where speed isn't needed.

On the pricing front, typical retail indicators confirm this trend. A 3.5-inch, 1 TB desktop and surveillance HDDs are trading up about 4% QoQ to roughly US$53, and 2.5-inch, 1 TB notebook drives are up about 3% to near US$50 per unit. These product classes have seen price increases for three straight quarters, with the most recent quarter the steepest since Q4 2023. Some analysts expect HDD shortages to become more apparent by 2026, and suppliers may prioritize larger, higher-margin data-center customers, which could extend further price pressure into the consumer area. After NAND flash shortage powering SSDs, HDDs are now in high demand and may remain like that for more quarter to come. Companies like Seagate are already investing a ton of resources into HAMR HDDs with the capacity of roughly 55 TB for enterprise.

https://www.techpowerup.com/344108/hdd-pric...ortage#comments

syukur suda secure 4 x 2b, 2 x 4tb NAS
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Capitalism at its best, driven by greed by corportations.

Why not subscribe to Gemini Ai Pro, can get 2TB free cloud storage too.
chupapi_munyayo
post Dec 16 2025, 03:16 PM

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Seagate Ironwolf Nas 3.5 HDD
8TB
RM850, good deal?

bought 2 for my upcoming NAS set up

LegendLee
post Dec 16 2025, 03:26 PM

><3LG3|\|D
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It's just 4% rise.
In comparison to RAM, those are real rookie numbers.
JohnL77
post Dec 16 2025, 03:28 PM

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QUOTE(Ichibanichi @ Dec 16 2025, 02:46 PM)
Arrr.......
CCP land
2TB SSD at the price of dirt cheap RM20
Once receive..... whistling.gif  whistling.gif  whistling.gif  whistling.gif
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Tipulah. Wolf Warriors said CCP SSDs more reliable than SK Hynix.

QUOTE(Computer^freak @ Dec 16 2025, 02:51 PM)
Well, free market economy. Nothing wrong.
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You're missing my point, if China can magically increase SSD output, why are they pivoting to HDDs? I'm not saying they can't do it, but I think it will take some time.
MGM
post Dec 16 2025, 03:40 PM

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AI bubble going to burst, many pretenders would collapse, many datacenters would be abandoned or tookover, the last few standing would reap all the fruits. It is getting exciting.
Phoenix_KL
post Today, 12:03 AM

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AI Chip Shortage Seen Pushing Smartphone Prices Higher in 2026

https://finance.yahoo.com/news/ai-chip-shor...-181823863.html
diffyhelman2
post Today, 12:48 AM

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QUOTE(JohnL77 @ Dec 16 2025, 03:28 PM)
Tipulah. Wolf Warriors said CCP SSDs more reliable than SK Hynix.
You're missing my point, if China can magically increase SSD output, why are they pivoting to HDDs? I'm not saying they can't do it, but I think it will take some time.
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modern dram and nand memory fabs are way more expensive to build and operate than legacy hdd spinning platter factories. Japan and Germany couldnt sustain the capital cost while sustaining a price war, hence why today only three big manufacturers left to corner the market.

the other thing is that for years HDD demand going down with shift to SSD, likely a lot of underutilized capacity at those Hdd factories. too bad malaysian ones all closed down edi due to chyna.

 

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