NEW YORK, July 14, 2026, 15:05 EDT
Dell Technologies Inc. NYSE:DELL climbed 5.8% on Tuesday, adding about $16.2 billion in market value, after preliminary results from International Business Machines Corp. NYSE:IBM showed large customers shifting late-June spending toward servers, storage and memory. The move gives Dell investors a fresh demand signal from outside the company.
IBM said clients redirected quarterly capital spending to supply-constrained infrastructure before expected price increases, while several large deals slipped. Chief Executive Arvind Krishna said IBM “did not adapt and move quickly enough”; preliminary infrastructure revenue fell 7%. That is a direct read-through — evidence from one company about another. SEC
The timing matters because IBM described the final weeks of June, after Dell issued its first-quarter report on May 28 and before Dell’s fiscal second-quarter release scheduled for Sept. 3. It suggests the spending shift may be supporting Dell’s current-quarter demand, not just its older backlog. The market wants proof.
At 15:05 EDT, delayed market data showed a sharp split:
| Company | Price | Day move | Approx. market-value change |
|---|---|---|---|
| Dell Technologies NYSE:DELL | $451.76 | +5.8% | +$16.2 billion |
| IBM NYSE:IBM | $219.34 | -24.4% | -$67.5 billion |
| Hewlett Packard Enterprise Co. NYSE:HPE | $49.40 | +4.6% | +$3.1 billion |
| Super Micro Computer Inc. NASDAQ:SMCI | $27.75 | +0.3% | +$59 million |
Market-value changes are reporter calculations using live market capitalization, share price and the day’s dollar move; figures are rounded.
Dell’s gain was equivalent to about 24% of IBM’s loss; Dell and HPE together equaled roughly 29%. That is not a transfer of cash, but it shows how quickly investors are moving valuation toward companies tied to the physical AI buildout. The numbers tell a different story.
Dell’s own first-quarter mix explains why IBM’s comments carried so much weight:
| Dell Q1 fiscal 2027 business line | Revenue | Year-on-year growth | Share of total revenue |
|---|---|---|---|
| AI-optimized servers | $16.1 billion | +757% | 36.8% |
| Client Solutions Group | $14.6 billion | +17% | 33.3% |
| Traditional servers and networking | $8.5 billion | +92% | 19.5% |
| Storage | $4.3 billion | +8% | 9.9% |
Revenue shares are calculated against Dell’s $43.8 billion quarterly total and exclude a small corporate-and-other component.
AI-server revenue was already larger than Dell’s entire client unit, which includes its PC business. Dell booked $24.4 billion of AI orders and raised its fiscal 2027 AI-server revenue forecast to roughly $60 billion. Chief Operating Officer Jeff Clarke said the “AI opportunity shows no signs of slowing.” Dell is now traded as infrastructure first, PC second. Dell Technologies
That thesis was reinforced last week when Evercore ISI analyst Amit Daryanani raised his price target to $500 and said “demand remains well ahead of supply” after meetings with Dell executives. At $451.76, the shares remained 3.8% below their June 1 record, though Tuesday’s $463.05 high came within 1.4%. Execution now matters more than narrative. Investor’s Business Daily
The peer move was selective. HPE rose 4.6%, while Super Micro gained only 0.3%, hinting that investors preferred broad enterprise exposure — servers plus storage and services — over a blanket server trade. One session does not prove a lasting split.
But IBM’s explanation could describe a pull-forward: customers buying earlier before price increases, not buying more over the full year. Dell’s first-quarter gross margin fell to 17.8% from 21.1%, while inventory rose 44% from January to $15.1 billion as revenue surged 88%. Supply scarcity can lift sales and still squeeze product mix and tie up cash. The market wants proof.
The next hard test is Dell’s Sept. 3 report. Investors will look for AI orders, storage growth, Infrastructure Solutions Group margins, inventory and evidence that the late-June budget shift continued into July. Dell’s current guidance calls for $165 billion to $169 billion in fiscal 2027 revenue and adjusted earnings per share, which exclude selected items, of $17.90 at the midpoint. Timing matters here.
Tuesday’s move says investors see IBM’s miss as Dell’s opening. The signal is strong; Dell still has to turn it into margins and cash.