By Jaspreet Singh and Kanchana Chakravarty
May 29 (Reuters) – Dell’s shares surged 30% on Friday, as the PC maker’s blockbuster results showed that its growing focus on AI servers was helping it capitalize on āthe data center boom, making the company one of the biggest beneficiaries of the new technology.
The company, whose āAI servers are crucial components in the global AI infrastructure build-out, is set to add $62 billion to its market value of about $206 billion, if āgains hold.
A household name in the PC market, Dell has in recent years scaled up its AI hardware business. Dell’s AI server revenue of $16.1 billion surpassed its PC unit’s $14.6 billion in sales in the quarter.
The company’s infrastructure solutions segment, home to both traditional and AI-optimized servers as well as other storage, software and networking solutions, has consistently eclipsed PC business revenue in the āpast four quarters.
“We’ve been following Dell a ā long time and never seen anything like this. Not only do they get an “A” for execution, but you can make an argument that Dell is even the best way to play ā AI out there,” Melius Research analysts said.
Dell’s outlook for “AI and traditional servers are still very conservative,” as the firm has stronger prospects for selling CPU racks to AI cloud providers like CoreWeave and Nscale, the brokerage said.
The blowout quarter lifted shares of server āmakers Super āMicro Computer and Hewlett Packard Enterprise around 14%, while Dell’s āPC rival HP also rose 10%.
Hewlett Packard Enterprise, āwhich reports results on Monday, has also been prioritizing higher-margin product orders. But it has a smaller server business compared with Dell.
Dell Chief Operating Officer Jeff Clarke acknowledged the ongoing “supply constrained” environment, particularly concerning memory chips, but said that its customers were actively securing supply for extended periods.
The company has banked on balanced price hikes as well as its scale and strong supplier relationships to wade through the memory crisis. Dell had deliberately delayed price increases last year to capture āmarket share, but raised prices in the first quarter to offset anticipated āhigher component costs.
Strong returns from its AI server business are also helping ācushion the blow to margins from the soaring āmemory prices.
HP, which focuses mostly on PCs and printers, reported 13.2% growth in its personal systems ādivision, while sales in Dell’s PC business unit āgrew 17%, driven by a āWindows 11 refresh cycle and growing focus on AI PCs.
