NEW YORK, June 20, 2026, 16:02 EDT
- Dell ended Tuesday at $409.50, losing 2.34% for the session, though it’s still up roughly 3.5% since June 12. The week was shortened by the holiday.
- U.S. stock markets didn’t open on June 19 for Juneteenth. The most recent full session before the weekend was Thursday’s close.
- Investors are looking at Dell’s June 25 annual meeting this week and paying close attention to how its AI server outlook is holding up.
Dell Technologies Inc. shares rose for the week in shortened U.S. trading, despite falling Thursday. Investors kept buying the company’s artificial-intelligence server pitch, putting less weight on its legacy PC business.
Dell shares finished at $409.50 on June 18, with a session range from $407.92 to $435.96, according to investor-relations data. The stock had climbed Monday, slipped Tuesday, jumped Wednesday, and dropped again Thursday, but stayed above the June 15 close.
Why now? U.S. markets are closed Friday for Juneteenth and then for the weekend, so Dell holders will have to wait for Monday for regular trading to resume. The next week, Dell’s annual meeting is on tap. Shareholders log on June 25 at 12:00 p.m. Central Time.
Traders are shifting focus from Dell’s old PC business to its newer AI infrastructure push. Shares are now trading more on Dell as a supplier for AI servers, storage, and gear that power large artificial intelligence projects. The company posted a record fiscal Q1 and raised its full-year forecast.
Dell reported last month that fiscal first-quarter revenue climbed 88% to $43.8 billion. Diluted earnings per share jumped 282% to $5.24. Jeff Clarke, vice chair and COO, said Dell logged $24.4 billion in AI orders and sees the AI opportunity with “no signs of slowing.” CFO David Kennedy described execution as “exceptionally strong.” The company now expects fiscal 2027 revenue to reach a midpoint of $167 billion. SEC
The short version of the bull case: demand is strong, and Dell says it can meet it. But AI servers are expensive, with a lot riding on the supply chain. So investors are eyeing margins, parts supply, and whether buyers stick to current order trends.
Dell runs up against HP and Lenovo in the PC market, but the rally in the shares lately is about data-center spend. Reuters cited J.P. Morgan analysts led by Samik Chatterjee earlier this year, who said Dell holds a “leadership position in AI compute” for second-tier cloud and enterprise buyers. Reuters
Dell set a new payout signal for investors this week. The company said it will pay a 63 cent quarterly dividend on each common share. Shareholders of record by July 21 will get the payment on July 31.
Dell’s board is urging shareholders to back a move to shift the company’s place of incorporation from Delaware to Texas this week. The company says the change won’t impact its operations, management, strategy, assets or where employees work. Michael Dell said Texas will help the company “build for the long term.” Dell Technologies
The setup is riskier now. If AI server orders slow, suppliers run into trouble, prices get squeezed, trade gets hit or tech stocks fall, Dell could take a hit, more so after the stock’s strong rally since late May. Dell’s own list of risk factors includes rivals, dependence on suppliers, shaky AI demand, trade issues and market volatility. Future results could differ from what the company expects.