Seagate Technology Gets Bold $620 Target From Bernstein — Buy the Dip?

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By Joel South Published

Quick Read

  • Seagate Technology (STX) received a $620 price target from Bernstein, up from $500, with Outperform rating, citing that Google’s TurboQuant AI model poses zero impact to HDD demand and negligible impact to NAND demand. The company posted Q2 FY2026 non-GAAP EPS of $3.11 beating consensus and gross margins of 42.2%, with Q3 guidance for revenue of $2.90B and EPS of $3.40.

  • Bernstein views the recent -10% selloff in Seagate as an overreaction to fear that TurboQuant will destroy storage demand, asserting instead that the market has created an attractive entry point as HDD fundamentals remain intact.

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Seagate Technology Gets Bold $620 Target From Bernstein — Buy the Dip?

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Seagate Technology (NASDAQ:STX | STX Price Prediction) received a bullish price target raise from Bernstein on Tuesday, with the firm lifting the target to $620 from $500 while keeping an Outperform rating. The call directly challenges the TurboQuant-driven selloff that has hammered storage stocks over the past week. The call is direct: the fear is misplaced, the dip is an opportunity.

Ticker Company Firm Old → New Rating New Price Target One-Line Takeaway
STX Seagate Technology Bernstein Outperform → Outperform $620 TurboQuant selloff creates entry point; bull thesis intact

The Analyst’s Case

Bernstein’s argument is clean and unambiguous. TurboQuant should have “zero impact” on hard disk drive demand and “negligible impact” on NAND demand. Google’s new AI efficiency model rattled the sector, but Bernstein sees no structural threat to HDD fundamentals — only a market overreaction that reset valuations to more attractive levels. The selloff creates an attractive entry point for Seagate, contends the firm.

That view is reinforced by JPMorgan, which initiated coverage on STX with an Overweight rating and a $525 price target on March 30, citing “strong demand from cloud computing and pricing strength” and an oligopolistic HDD market structure supporting pricing discipline.

Why the Selloff Happened — and Why Bernstein Says It’s Wrong

The damage was swift. STX closed down 8.00% on March 27 after investors interpreted Google’s TurboQuant AI model as a potential demand killer for memory and storage. The stock has now fallen -10.13% over the past week and sits at $362.43, well below its 52-week high of $459.04.

Bernstein’s $620 target sits well above current trading levels — a significant premium even to the analyst consensus target of $477.61 and the broader “Moderate Buy” consensus from 24 analysts with an average 12-month target of $447.35.

Company Snapshot & Recent Performance

Seagate’s fundamentals give Bernstein’s conviction real backing. The company posted Q2 FY2026 non-GAAP EPS of $3.11, beating consensus of $2.84, on revenue of $2.83 billion — up 21.5% year-over-year. Gross margins hit a record 42.2%, and free cash flow surged to $607 million from $150 million a year earlier. Q3 guidance calls for revenue of $2.90 billion and non-GAAP EPS of $3.40.

CEO Dave Mosley framed the trajectory plainly: “As AI applications amplify the creation and economic value of data, modern data centers increasingly need storage solutions that combine performance and cost-efficiency at exabyte-scale.”

Risks and Considerations

Bernstein’s revised target is aggressive — even the AI-model bull case for STX over one year lands at $491.68, well short of $620. That gap highlights real risks worth noting: CEO Dave Mosley sold approximately $10 million in shares on March 19, continuing a pattern of 56 insider sells and zero buys over the past year. Tariff uncertainty and the dilutive impact from Exchangeable Senior Notes due 2028 remain live headwinds. Bernstein’s view is that the TurboQuant selloff is an overreaction, though the stock’s elevated beta of 1.648 means volatility remains a live consideration.

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About the Author Joel South →

Joel South covers large-cap stocks, dividend investing, and major market trends, with a focus on earnings analysis, valuation, and turning complex data into actionable insights for investors.

He brings more than 15 years of experience as an investor and financial journalist, including 12 years at The Motley Fool, where he served as an investment analyst, Bureau Chief, and later led the Fool.com investing news desk. He has also co-hosted an investing podcast and appeared across TV and radio discussing market trends.

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