Data centers are now hoarding SSDs as hard drive supplies dry up

DragonSlayer101

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What we know so far: With hardware and semiconductor makers struggling to meet surging AI demand, prices for critical PC components have soared in recent months. A new report indicates that AI-driven consumption is now causing storage shortages, with delivery times for enterprise hard drives stretching beyond two years.

According to Taiwan tech publication DigiTimes, most AI firms are unwilling to wait two years for HDD supplies to stabilize and are shifting to SSDs instead. To contain costs, they are choosing QLC NAND-based drives over the faster, more durable, and more expensive TLC variants.

Industry observers expect the surge in QLC-based SSD demand from data centers in the US, Canada, and China to trigger a consumer SSD shortage. Since most mainstream drives already use QLC NAND to stay affordable, the shortfall could push costs even higher, adding pressure to consumers already facing record hardware prices.

Analysts believe that with AI firms adopting QLC en masse, it will surpass TLC in total sales by early 2027 – a seismic shift for the SSD market. The report also notes that AI companies are already stockpiling QLC NAND ahead of an expected shortage, leaving some manufacturers' production capacity fully booked through 2026.

The rapid growth of the AI sector and the race toward artificial general intelligence have put a massive strain on the infrastructure supporting hyperscale data centers. Beyond GPUs and accelerators, the surge has driven unprecedented demand for every layer of PC hardware – from CPUs and memory to high-speed networking and large-scale storage arrays.

Soaring demand has pushed component prices sharply higher, with DRAM climbing nearly 50 percent in recent weeks. Reports indicate that AI data center operators in the US and China now receive only about 70 percent of their DRAM allocations, even after agreeing to pay the inflated rates.

The price surge extends beyond high-bandwidth memory. An earlier DigiTimes report notes that demand for standard DDR5 RDIMMs now exceeds supply, as major chipmakers Samsung and SK Hynix divert production from consumer markets toward higher-margin AI components.

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There are so many GPUs, storage and memory just being warehoused right now because they can't build data centers fast enough. Even if they built the data center, the logistics of powering it is an issue.
 
Just wait It out, till it crashes.
This is the worst Black November that I can recall to date in terms of multiple factors affecting diy. I believe the prebuilt market will be the short term go to for those on tight budgets. I can't believe Lenovo had a prebuilt system with an 285k, 5090 amd 64 gig of ram going for 3399 just a few weeks ago for a flash sale. My friend still bought it at 3699 usd days later. If this continues long term I am just going to partition my old data ssds that I no longer use.
 

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Last week it was ram, now SSDs and HDDs. Soon it will be everything except CPUs that are getting more expensive because of AI.
They will start hoarding motherboards when server motherboard makers can't make more
 
This site and the press in general are missing a huge part of this "Prices on SSD and HDD" narrative. It is not just AI, AI and AI. It's the tariffs (taxes) that are driving costs into the stratosphere.

I built a rig in July, memory deal was $83 for 32GB. The tariff taxes went into place in September. The same memory is $199 today. Excessive demand alone would not push prices up this fast. It's the tariffs tariffs tariffs that is causing this misery.
 
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