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Enterprises Should Finally Stop Paying SSD Prices for Cold Data

Enterprises Should Finally Stop Paying SSD Prices for Cold Data

Analyst(s): Alastair Cooke
Publication Date: February 16, 2026

CTERA is challenging prevailing storage economics by urging enterprises to end the practice of storing cold data on expensive SSDs, as flash prices have tripled amid AI-fueled demand. Their hybrid cloud file system promises to cut storage costs by 50-70% by moving cold data to deep object storage while keeping hot data on flash, all under a unified global namespace. This shift could fundamentally alter how organizations approach data management and infrastructure investments.

What is Covered in This Article:

  • Examining the impact of soaring SSD prices on enterprise storage strategies
  • How hybrid cloud file services like CTERA’s global file system disrupt legacy storage models
  • Comparing the economics and operational implications of flash, disk, and object storage for cold data
  • Analyzing the competitive landscape, including NetApp, Dell EMC, and Nasuni
  • Key considerations for IT leaders evaluating data placement and cost optimization strategies

The News: CTERA has published a pointed analysis urging enterprises to stop paying premium SSD prices for the majority of their data that is rarely accessed, or ‘cold.’ Over the past year, enterprise SSD prices have nearly tripled, driven by surging demand from AI workloads and hyperscalers. CTERA’s solution leverages a hybrid cloud file system that caches active data on local SSDs for performance, while transparently migrating cold data to scalable, low-cost object storage in the cloud. This approach promises to reduce storage costs by up to 80%, extend hardware refresh cycles, and provide seamless access for users and applications through a single global namespace.

Enterprises Should Finally Stop Paying SSD Prices for Cold Data

Analyst Take: The economics of enterprise storage are under unprecedented pressure, with SSD prices surging and most enterprise data sitting idle for months or years. CTERA’s call to move cold data off flash and into object storage isn’t just a cost-saving tactic; it signals a broader shift toward intelligent, policy-driven data placement that could reshape the storage market’s competitive landscape.

The End of One-Size-Fits-All Storage: Intelligent Data Placement Takes Center Stage

Enterprises have long defaulted to keeping all file data on high-performance storage, even as research consistently shows that 60-80% of this data is cold and infrequently accessed. With SSD prices nearly tripling in the last year due to AI and hyperscaler demand, this approach is no longer sustainable. CTERA’s hybrid cloud file system addresses this by splitting hot and cold data: hot data remains on fast SSDs close to users, while cold data is automatically tiered to deep object storage in the cloud. This not only slashes costs but also eliminates the need for constant hardware expansions and refreshes. Competitors such as NetApp (with Cloud Volumes ONTAP), Dell EMC (with PowerScale and ECS), and Nasuni are also advancing hybrid and cloud-native storage architectures, but CTERA’s emphasis on a unified global namespace and a transparent user experience sets a high bar for operational simplicity and cost savings.

Market Implications: From Hardware Lock-In to Data Fabric Agility

Traditional on-premises storage vendors have responded to cost pressures with hybrid arrays that combine flash and disk, but these solutions often perpetuate hardware lock-in and force customers to make ongoing capacity purchases as data grows. CTERA’s model, by contrast, decouples data growth from hardware investments by leveraging virtually unlimited cloud object storage. This aligns with the industry’s broader shift toward data fabrics and policy-driven automation, in which access, placement, and compliance are managed independently of the underlying infrastructure. As organizations seek to optimize for both cost and agility, the ability to maintain familiar file permissions, integrate with Active Directory, and deliver local-like performance for remote and branch offices, all without re-architecting workflows, will be a key differentiator. Watch for established players such as NetApp, Dell EMC, and Nasuni to accelerate their cloud-integrated offerings in response.

What to Watch:

  • Trends in enterprise SSD pricing and the impact of AI and hyperscaler demand on storage budgets
  • Adoption rates of hybrid cloud file systems that enable seamless tiering of cold data to object storage
  • Changes in cloud object storage pricing, from SSD and RAM pricing pressure
  • Competitive responses from NetApp, Dell EMC, Nasuni, and others as they evolve their hybrid and cloud-native storage portfolios
  • Enterprise IT strategies for reducing hardware lock-in and shifting toward policy-driven data placement
  • User experience and operational metrics as organizations migrate from traditional NAS to global file systems with edge caching

You can read Aron Brand’s original post on the CTERA website.

Disclosure: Futurum is a research and advisory firm that engages or has engaged in research, analysis, and advisory services with many technology companies, including those mentioned in this article. The author does not hold any equity positions with any company mentioned in this article.

Analysis and opinions expressed herein are specific to the analyst individually and data and other information that might have been provided for validation, not those of Futurum as a whole.

Other insights from Futurum:

Technical Insight: CTERA – An Enterprise Ready Global File System

Navigating the Shift to Production AI in 2026

Futurum’s 2026 Key Issues & Predictions Report

Author Information

Alastair has made a twenty-year career out of helping people understand complex IT infrastructure and how to build solutions that fulfil business needs. Much of his career has included teaching official training courses for vendors, including HPE, VMware, and AWS. Alastair has written hundreds of analyst articles and papers exploring products and topics around on-premises infrastructure and virtualization and getting the most out of public cloud and hybrid infrastructure. Alastair has also been involved in community-driven, practitioner-led education through the vBrownBag podcast and the vBrownBag TechTalks.

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