Dell Soars 54%, HP Enterprise Rockets 59% in a Month as AI-Server Demand Booms

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By David Moadel Published

Quick Read

  • DELL surged 54% and HPE rocketed 59% in one month after blowout earnings showed Dell's AI-server revenue jumping 757% year over year.

  • NVDA silicon and SMCI systems sit alongside Dell and HPE racks inside hyperscaler builds, signaling broad strength across the entire AI-infrastructure cohort.

  • Dell's FY27 guidance targets $60 billion in AI-server revenue, implying 144% growth, with next earnings due in late August.

  • Act now: the analyst who called NVIDIA in 2010 just named his top 10 AI stocks — and Dell Technologies didn't make the cut. Grab the names FREE today.

Dell Soars 54%, HP Enterprise Rockets 59% in a Month as AI-Server Demand Booms

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Shares of Dell Technologies (NYSE:DELL | DELL Price Prediction) and Hewlett Packard Enterprise (NYSE:HPE) are gaining attention as both names extending a torrid one-month run powered by AI-server demand. DELL stock is up 54% over the past month, while HPE stock has rallied 59% over the same window.

Dell shares were last changing hands near $398, building on a powerful year that has lifted the stock 252% over the trailing 12 months. HPE stock is trading around $50, with a one-year gain of 176%.

Both moves trace back to back-to-back blowout earnings reports and raised guidance that reframed the AI-hardware narrative for the rest of 2026. The market is now treating Dell and HPE as direct, scaled beneficiaries of hyperscaler and enterprise AI capex.

AI Server Demand Fuels the Rally

Dell set the tone on May 28 with fiscal Q1 2027 results that smashed expectations. Revenue came in at $43.84 billion, up 88% year over year, with non-GAAP diluted EPS of $4.86 versus a $2.96 consensus.

AI-optimized server revenue for Dell jumped to $16.13 billion, up 757%, and Dell booked $24.4 billion in AI orders during the quarter. Management raised its full-year FY27 revenue guidance to $165 billion to $169 billion and now expects roughly $60 billion of AI-server revenue this year.

HPE followed on June 1 with its own beat. The company’s Q2 FY26 revenue rose 40% to $10.68 billion, with non-GAAP diluted EPS of $0.79 well above the company’s own $0.51 to $0.55 guide. HPE’s networking segment, lifted by the Juniper Networks integration, surged 148%, and the company’s server revenue grew 33%.

Peers Ride the Same Wave

CEO Antonio Neri framed the HPE quarter with confidence, stating, “HPE delivered an exceptional quarter with record-breaking revenue, higher-than-anticipated profitability, and increased free cash flow, reflecting strong execution and healthy demand across the business.” Management lifted FY26 revenue growth guidance to 29% to 33% and now expects free cash flow of at least $3.5 billion.

The setup mirrors the broader AI-infrastructure cohort, where NVIDIA (NASDAQ:NVDA) silicon and Super Micro Computer (NASDAQ:SMCI) systems sit alongside Dell and HPE racks inside hyperscaler builds. Retail enthusiasm has tracked the fundamentals, with Reddit sentiment for DELL peaking at 85 after earnings and HPE sentiment hitting 90 on June 5.

That said, vertical moves of this size invite volatility. AI-hardware names can swing hard on capex commentary or hyperscaler order timing, and DELL shares are no exception even as the monthly chart keeps climbing.

What to Watch Next

The forward catalysts are well defined. Dell’s next earnings report is expected in late August, with HPE’s Q3 FY26 release slated for early September. Any hyperscaler capex updates between now and then could move both names in tandem.

For investors, the key question is whether AI-server order velocity holds. Dell’s guidance implies AI-server revenue growth of 144% for FY27, and HPE’s networking ramp suggests the Juniper integration is pulling forward, not slowing. The structural demand story is intact, but position sizing matters after a run of this magnitude.

For DELL and HPE shareholders, the prudent approach is to respect both the trend and the volatility profile. Traders should watch their stop levels into the close, and longer-term holders may want to consider whether their AI-infrastructure exposure has quietly become outsized after the monthly surge.

Photo of David Moadel
About the Author David Moadel →

David Moadel is financial writer specializing in stocks, ETFs, options, precious metals, and Bitcoin. David has written well over 1,000 articles for leading online publications, helping investors understand markets, income strategies, and risk.

His work has appeared in The Motley Fool, InvestorPlace, U.S. News & World Report, TipRanks, ValueWalk, Benzinga, Market Realist, TalkMarkets, Finmasters, 24/7 Wall St., and others.

With a master’s degree in education, David has taught at the elementary, high school, and college levels. That teaching background shapes his writing style: clear, educational, and practical. David has also built a loyal social-media audience by providing trustworthy financial content on YouTube, X/Twitter, and StockTwits.

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