Economic news

HPE Shares Soar 28% on Stellar AI Infrastructure Demand

June 2 (Reuters) - Hewlett Packard Enterprise shares surged 28% on Tuesday after a rosy quarter that put it on track ​to hit long-term financial targets two years ahead of schedule, the ‌latest evidence of strong demand for its AI servers used in data centers.

The gains, if sustained, would add around $17 billion to the company's market value of $62.36 billion. They follow strong forecasts from ​rivals Dell and Super Micro Computer as Big Tech presses ahead with around $700 billion ​in AI spending this year.

HPE's shares, which had nearly doubled ⁠this year as of last close, are on track to record their ​biggest one-day percentage gain.

The insatiable demand from the AI industry has allowed server ​makers to pass on higher costs for supply-constrained memory chips to customers, shielding their margins. The firms said strong supplier ties are also helping them navigate the shortage.

"The ​year of refresh" for enterprise IT equipment, AI modernization and product updates ​is also benefiting the companies, Piper Sandler analysts said in a client note.

"While HPE is ‌seeing ⁠this tidal wave, we prefer to be in 'other boats' given exposures," Piper Sandler said. Dell shares were down around 2%, while those of Super Micro rose 6%.

At least 12 brokerages raised their price targets on HPE's stock, ​giving it a ​median price target ⁠of $66, according to data compiled by LSEG. That is up from $26.50 before the report.

"The biggest takeaway from the quarter ​was that HPE is benefiting from the same pricing ​dynamic that ⁠has recently driven upside at Dell - customers are absorbing materially higher server prices with little evidence of demand destruction," Morgan Stanley analysts said.

HPE has a 12-month forward ⁠price-to-earnings ​ratio of 15.66, compared with Dell's 23.92 ​and Super Micro's 14.49.

Reporting by Jaspreet ​Singh and Kanishka Ajmera in Bengaluru; Editing by Mrigank Dhaniwala and Sahal Muhammed

Source: Reuters


To leave a comment you must or Join us


More news


Back to economic news list

By visiting our website and services, you agree to the conditions of use of cookies. Learn more
I agree