Western Digital stock price drops 7% after-hours as risk-off trade hits WDC

March 4, 2026
Western Digital stock price drops 7% after-hours as risk-off trade hits WDC

New York, March 3, 2026, 18:32 EST — After-hours

Shares of Nasdaq-listed Western Digital (WDC.O) fell about 7.2% to $250.61 in after-hours trading on Tuesday, after the hard-drive maker hit an intraday low of $244.89.

The slide landed in a market that has turned defensive fast, with investors selling both stocks and bonds and moving into cash. “Oil, and ⁠the dollar, are the only two things that people want to own right now,” said Michael Arone, chief investment strategist at State Street Investment Management. 1

Investors have been trying to price how long the Middle East conflict might last — and what it does to inflation if energy stays bid. “The reality is setting in that a prolonged conflict could dampen global growth and re‑ignite inflation pressures,” Joseph Tanious, chief investment strategist at Northern Trust Asset Management, told Reuters. 2

On Wall Street, the S&P 500 ended down 0.94% and the Nasdaq slid 1.02%, after earlier losses of more than 2% as Treasury yields rose. The Cboe Volatility Index (.VIX), often called Wall Street’s “fear gauge,” hit its highest since November, according to Reuters. 3

Western Digital’s drop tracked a broad pullback in storage and memory shares. Seagate Technology was down about 5.8%, Micron Technology fell nearly 8% and Sandisk slid about 8.6%.

At the Morgan Stanley Technology, Media & Telecom Conference earlier Tuesday, CEO Irving Tan pointed to longer customer commitments as a buffer against the old “two-quarter” cycle. “We have 1 of our top 5 hyperscalers that has given us orders … through to calendar year 2028,” Tan said, adding that the top seven have firm POs — purchase orders — for calendar 2026. 4

In a Feb. 13 statement ahead of the event, Western Digital said the CEO and CFO would present at Morgan Stanley’s conference and that a replay would be posted on its investor site after the talk. 5

On Feb. 3, the company expanded its share repurchase authorization by $4 billion; Tan said the move showed confidence in WD’s future and a focus on returns alongside reinvestment and debt reduction. 6

But the stock is still trading like a high-beta proxy for rates and geopolitics, with valuation-sensitive tech taking the hit when oil and yields jump. A Reuters analysis on Monday said the war adds a new layer of uncertainty to a U.S. economy that had been showing more resilience to shocks. 7

Oil is the near-term check on that narrative: Brent settled at $81.40 a barrel on Tuesday, up 4.7%, and U.S. crude ended at $74.56, up 4.4%, ahead of Wednesday’s U.S. government inventory report. For Western Digital holders, the next company marker is a $0.125-per-share dividend due March 18 to shareholders of record March 5. 8