Seagate Technology Holdings plc
CorpDigest
Seagate Technology Holdings plc
Annual Revenue
Last reviewed: 2025-06-08 · By Swet Parvadiya
FY2024 Revenue
$7.5B
▲ 8.3% vs FY2023 ($7.0B)
Net Income: $618M
Seagate Technology Holdings plc reported $7.5B in revenue for fiscal year 2024. This represents a growth of 8.3% compared to the 2023 figure of $7.0B.
The fiscal 2022 to fiscal 2023 revenue collapse — from $14.1 billion to $6.96 billion — is the single most important financial fact about Seagate's business model: it is inherently cyclical, dependent on inventory decisions by a small number of large enterprise customers, and capable of halving in revenue in a single fiscal year when those customers defer purchases. The $21.5 billion market capitalization prices the recovery, not the trough, which means investors are making a cyclical bet rather than a stable earnings multiple bet. Recovery to $7.54 billion in fiscal 2024, with 29.5 percent non-GAAP gross margin expansion from the trough levels, was driven by the hyperscale data center buildout that AI infrastructure investment accelerated. The nearline enterprise segment — drives installed in data center racks by Microsoft, Amazon, Google, and Meta — grew to over 65 percent of total revenue, displacing the consumer and essential SAS drives that had historically balanced the revenue base. R&D expenditure exceeding $1.2 billion in fiscal 2024 — nearly 16 percent of revenue — funded primarily the near-field transducer and plasmonic write head technologies required for HAMR. The Mozaic 3+ platform's requirement for glass substrate rather than traditional aluminum, because aluminum's thermal expansion during 400-degree HAMR cycles would misalign the recording head, created a supply chain pivot that serves as a barrier to entry for competitors who would need to replicate both the HAMR technology and the glass substrate supply chain simultaneously. The manufacturing concentration in Thailand and Singapore — where the majority of Seagate's final drive assembly and head gimbal manufacturing is located — creates geographic concentration risk that the 2011 Thai floods vividly demonstrated: flood-related production disruptions contributed to a hard drive shortage and price spike that generated both significant profit and the price gouging allegations that followed.
Source: SEC EDGAR filings, annual earnings releases, and verified financial disclosures.