Shares of Dell Technologies (NYSE: DELL) edged lower despite the company delivering a powerful earnings report highlighted by surging AI server demand and a sharp jump in quarterly revenue. While investors digested margin pressures and rising component costs, Dell’s latest results underscored its growing role in the artificial intelligence infrastructure boom.
Dell Technologies Inc., DELL
The pullback comes even as the company projected massive long-term growth tied to AI systems, including a bold forecast for $50 billion in AI server revenue by fiscal 2027.
Dell reported fourth-quarter revenue of $33.4 billion, marking a 39% year-over-year increase and comfortably surpassing analyst expectations of $31.7 billion. Adjusted earnings per share came in at $3.89, beating consensus estimates of $3.52.
A major driver behind the strong quarter was accelerating demand for AI-optimized servers used in data centers. Enterprises and cloud providers are rapidly expanding computing capacity to support generative AI workloads, large language models, and high-performance data processing. Dell said it now expects approximately $50 billion in AI server revenue for the fiscal year ending January 2027.
The company also revealed a record backlog of $43 billion, signaling sustained customer demand and a strong pipeline of future deliveries.
Dell’s Infrastructure Solutions Group, which houses its server and networking operations, posted a 14.8% operating margin in the fourth quarter. That figure came in well above the average analyst estimate of 12.9%, suggesting disciplined cost execution in its core enterprise hardware lines.
Revenue in the traditional server and networking segment climbed 27%, reflecting strong enterprise refresh cycles and ongoing data center investments. Meanwhile, Dell’s PC division delivered a 14% revenue increase, adding additional support to overall profitability.
However, the AI server business itself operates at thinner margins in the mid-single-digit range. As AI systems require expensive components such as advanced memory and accelerators, profitability in this segment is currently lower than in legacy server lines.
A key risk facing Dell is the rapid rise in memory pricing. According to company leadership, spot prices for DRAM have increased as much as 5.5 times over the past six months, while NAND flash prices have surged up to fourfold.
To protect margins, Dell adjusted pricing across its server portfolio in December and updated tens of thousands of PC quotes in early January. It also shortened quote validity periods to reduce exposure to volatile component costs.
These pricing resets highlight the delicate balance Dell must maintain: capturing AI-driven demand while shielding profitability from input cost shocks. Record results leave limited room for operational missteps, particularly if memory markets remain tight.
Dell appears to be leaning heavily on its scale and supplier relationships to navigate the ongoing AI hardware crunch. The company’s leadership indicated that long-standing supply agreements and global procurement networks, strengthened during pandemic-era disruptions, are now providing a competitive edge.
Confidence in reliable delivery has become a decisive factor in enterprise purchasing decisions. In one case, a Dell partner attributed a $7.7 million contract win to customer trust in Dell’s ability to ship hardware on time.
This contrasts with challenges faced by competitors such as Hewlett Packard Enterprise, which has cited aggressive pricing pressure and GPU transition issues that weighed on profitability and led to workforce reductions.
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