By Jaspreet Singh
Feb 26 (Reuters) – Dell forecast fiscal 2027 revenue above Wall Street estimates on Thursday, betting on growing demand for its โartificial intelligence-optimized servers, sending its shares up around 6% in extended โtrading.
Big Tech firms, such as Alphabet, Microsoft, Amazon and Meta, are expected to spend at least $630 โbillion to build AI infrastructure this year, which would boost demand for vendors like Dell and rival Super Micro Computer.
U.S. trade regulations and surging memory chip costs due to the AI infrastructure build out has forced companies like Dell โand HP Inc to implement โ price increases, which are helping them offset cost pressures.
Almost all servers have memory chips, as they hold data and instructions โ to keep running the processors at high speed, which is of paramount importance for AI applications.
Dell expects AI servers revenue to grow 103% to about $50 billion โin fiscal โ2027.
The company said it has more than โ4,000 AI server customers, including โElon Musk’s AI startup xAI and CoreWeave.
Dell forecast annual revenue of $138 billion to $142 billion, above analysts’ average estimate of $125.54 billion, according to data compiled by LSEG.
The memory chip squeeze is expected to dampen global demand for consumer electronics, including PCs, smartphones and gaming consoles. HP Inc said it expected fiscal 2026 โresults to be at the low end โof its prior forecasts, while China’s Lenovo warned โabout mounting pressures on PC โshipments.
Dell expects annual adjusted earnings per share of $12.90 per share, โabove estimates of $11.59.
It reported record revenue โof $33.4 billion in โthe fourth quarter, beating estimates of $31.73 billion. Its adjusted EPS of $3.89 also exceeded estimates of $3.53.
Dell’s revenue from its infrastructure solutions group, which includes its โstorage, software and server โofferings, jumped 73% to $19.60 billion, while sales from the client solutions โgroup – home to PCs – rose 14% to $13.49 billion.
(Reporting by Jaspreet Singh โin Bengaluru; Editing by Shinjini Ganguli)