Thursday, October 22nd 2015

Seagate Technology Raises Targeted Annual Dividend 17% to $2.52
Seagate Technology plc (NASDAQ:STX) today announced that its Board of Directors has approved a 17 percent increase in the company's targeted regular cash dividend. The targeted annual dividend will increase from $2.16 to $2.52 per share and will continue to be paid quarterly. The first payment at the new quarterly rate of $0.63 per share is scheduled to be paid on November 20, 2015 to shareholders of record as of the close of business on November 6, 2015. The declaration and payment of any future quarterly dividends will continue to be at the discretion of the Board of Directors and will be dependent upon Seagate's financial position, results of operations, available cash, cash flow, capital requirements and other factors deemed relevant by the Board.
"Today's increase in our dividend targets reflects our confidence in Seagate's ability to continue to generate sustainable operating cash flow and maintain a strong balance sheet," said Steve Luczo, Seagate chairman and chief executive officer. "This is consistent with our capital allocation priorities we have previously articulated, including returning cash to shareholders through dividends and share redemption."
"Today's increase in our dividend targets reflects our confidence in Seagate's ability to continue to generate sustainable operating cash flow and maintain a strong balance sheet," said Steve Luczo, Seagate chairman and chief executive officer. "This is consistent with our capital allocation priorities we have previously articulated, including returning cash to shareholders through dividends and share redemption."
14 Comments on Seagate Technology Raises Targeted Annual Dividend 17% to $2.52
Their share price dropping without a parachute. I am pretty sure their shareholders still celebrate the higher dividend. Or maybe they don't.
Seriously, I really hope they don't become an AMD in the storage market.
They will get left behind quick because they are still ONLY doing HDD. Meanwhile WD is doing HDF and SSD.
That said, I don't see that market lasting forever, agreed.
Even if it wasn't, HGST pretty much beat them in enterprise data with their Helioseal drives.
Novachips > Products > Flash Storage
That "last year" I posted was about the size of SSDs that are available today and the fact that Novachip's 8TB version SSD doesn't seems to need more than 9-10W. I had the impression that SSDs where at 2TBs top and going over that would lead to a storage medium with high power consumption compared to a same size HDD.
The "price per gigabyte" parameter is the main reason that keeps HDDs alive. But that could change pretty fast in the next 3-5-X years. With PCIe SSDs going faster and faster every day, SATA SSDs can only start offering more GBs per $ which could lead pretty fast at SSDs with enough storage and a low price tag to make HDDs irrelevant for almost everyone.