Today: 14 May 2026
Hewlett Packard Enterprise Stock Jumps as Activist Investors Circle Its AI Networking Pivot

Hewlett Packard Enterprise Stock Jumps as Activist Investors Circle Its AI Networking Pivot

Houston, May 13, 2026, 17:02 CDT

  • HPE shares jumped roughly 6% on word that additional activist investors had built positions.
  • HPE is absorbing Juniper into its broader networking division, ramping up its push for private-cloud solutions tailored to AI workloads—that’s where the pressure’s showing.
  • HPE will host its next earnings call on June 1, with margins, integration costs, and pressure from activists all returning to the spotlight.

Shares of Hewlett Packard Enterprise climbed Wednesday following a Semafor report that additional activist investors—among them Irenic Capital—have entered the stock, intensifying the pressure already coming from Elliott Management. Both HPE and Elliott declined to give Semafor a comment. The report noted Irenic’s strategy remains unclear.

Shares last traded at $32.07, up $1.87 for the day, as intraday volume topped 27 million. That pushed HPE’s market value to roughly $43.5 billion, thrusting its activist narrative back into focus for investors.

The timing’s crucial: HPE is under pressure to show that acquiring Juniper moves it into higher-margin networking and AI infrastructure—there’s more at stake here than just growing bigger. Elliott took on a $1.5 billion stake last year and secured board seats, with a right to add another director set to lapse in July, according to Semafor.

The rollout comes at a tricky moment for HPE’s leadership. On Tuesday, the company took the wraps off new GreenLake offerings—private-cloud, storage, and data-protection tools—targeting businesses getting their data AI-ready. Private cloud, here, refers to computing resources reserved for a single customer, not divvied up among the broader public cloud.

HPE says its latest private-cloud platform handles both virtual machines and Kubernetes containers. The latter—a tool for orchestrating containerized applications—helps companies deploy those modular code packages that are now standard for building modern software.

Fidelma Russo, HPE’s executive vice president and chief technology officer, described how enterprises are pushing for a “unified operating model” as they update systems for AI and cloud-native apps. That message echoes HPE’s core strategy: streamline with fewer tools, ramp up automation, and keep a bigger share of the customer’s data stack anchored to HPE hardware and software.

The next comprehensive update on that front is just ahead. HPE’s fiscal second-quarter earnings call lands on June 1, set to discuss the quarter that wrapped up April 30.

HPE’s most recent quarter handed activists fresh ammo: fiscal first-quarter revenue hit $9.3 billion, climbing 18% year over year. Networking jumped to $2.7 billion—up a whopping 151.5%, lifted by the Juniper deal. “We have been outperforming in our networking business,” Chief Executive Antonio Neri said. Hewlett Packard Enterprise

The competitive landscape remains narrow. Back in March, Reuters noted that HPE faces off with both Dell and Super Micro Computer in the AI server market, where higher memory-chip costs are forcing vendors to hike prices. On the networking front, HPE’s Juniper move tightened the gap with Cisco—the main player regulators were eyeing for antitrust concerns.

Regulatory risk still lingers. Last year, the Justice Department settled with HPE over its Juniper deal, according to Reuters. HPE must sell off its Instant On wireless unit and hand over a license to Juniper’s Mist AI software source code for wireless LAN products.

The activist push might turn out to be a double-edged sword. More investors demanding action could boost hopes for asset sales, cost reductions, or shifts in the board lineup. On the flip side, it risks pulling management’s focus as HPE works on integrating Juniper, rolls out new cloud offerings and keeps an eye on supply expenses. Semafor noted that multiple states remain opposed to the merger, potentially pushing for tougher remedies.

Last week, Rami Rahim—once Juniper’s CEO, now running HPE Networking—declared self-driving networks “no longer aspirational.” HPE is pushing that message hard to investors. But activists aren’t necessarily on board. Hewlett Packard Enterprise

Stock Market Today

  • ASX Showdown: Comparing Major Bank Stocks CBA and Big Miners BHP, Plus CSL Update
    May 13, 2026, 9:13 PM EDT. In a recent ChartWatch *LIVE* webinar, technical analyst Carl Capolingua broke down key ASX sectors, focusing on big banks vs. mining stocks. Detailed reviews covered Commonwealth Bank of Australia (CBA), National Australia Bank, and Westpac, alongside miners like BHP, Rio Tinto, and Fortescue Metals. Capolingua also analyzed the lithium sector and covered CSL, a major Australian biotech firm. The session highlighted how to use technical analysis for portfolio decisions amidst shifting market conditions. This weekly webinar engages hundreds of investors eager to apply trend-following methods to their holdings, emphasizing real-time stock cases across sectors.

Latest articles

Enovix Stock Drops After Q1 Beat as Smartphone Battery Tests Stay Unfinished

Enovix Stock Drops After Q1 Beat as Smartphone Battery Tests Stay Unfinished

14 May 2026
Enovix shares dropped 12.9% to $6.35 after hours Wednesday despite beating first-quarter revenue and adjusted-loss estimates. The decline followed news that smartphone battery qualification remains unfinished, with the company passing 72 of 75 customer tests. Revenue rose 49% to $7.6 million. Enovix cited progress in defense, industrial, and smart-eyewear sales.
Lightwave Logic Stock Jumps as AI-Photonics Bet Heads for a 2027 Production Test

Lightwave Logic Stock Jumps as AI-Photonics Bet Heads for a 2027 Production Test

14 May 2026
Lightwave Logic reported Q1 revenue up 27% to $29,000 and a net loss widening to $6.3 million. Shares rose 14% after the company said it is negotiating a supply and licensing deal for high-volume production in 2027. Four Fortune 500 customers are now in Stage 3 prototyping. Cash and equivalents totaled about $100 million as of May 11.
USA Rare Earth Stock Watch: Q1 Revenue, $1.75 Billion Cash and the China Supply Crunch

USA Rare Earth Stock Watch: Q1 Revenue, $1.75 Billion Cash and the China Supply Crunch

14 May 2026
USA Rare Earth reported Q1 revenue of $5.7 million and a net loss of $67 million, ending March with $1.75 billion in cash after a $1.5 billion PIPE. The company expects to sign documents this month for $1.6 billion in U.S. Commerce Department funding. Texas awarded a $14.18 million grant for the Round Top project. USA Rare Earth agreed in April to acquire Brazil’s Serra Verde for $2.8 billion.
KULR Stock Jumps as 300-Bitcoin Coinbase Transfer Tests Its Treasury Bet
Previous Story

KULR Stock Jumps as 300-Bitcoin Coinbase Transfer Tests Its Treasury Bet

Delta Flight to Lagos U-Turned Over the Atlantic. Eight Hours Later, Passengers Were Back in Atlanta
Next Story

Delta Flight to Lagos U-Turned Over the Atlantic. Eight Hours Later, Passengers Were Back in Atlanta

Go toTop