ROUND ROCK, Texas, May 6, 2026, 14:04 CDT
- Dell shares jumped roughly 10% by Wednesday afternoon, building on gains as investors bet on continued demand for AI servers and data-center hardware.
- The company wants shareholders to sign off on shifting its legal headquarters out of Delaware and into Texas at the annual meeting slated for June 25.
- The vote could face questions, given Michael Dell and Silver Lake’s sizeable voting power puts approval within reach. Certain governance tweaks might also limit options for shareholders to push back.
Dell Technologies Inc. shares surged Wednesday, swept up in an AMD-driven rally that rippled across AI hardware stocks and put extra momentum behind server makers. The gains underscore how Wall Street is leaning into Dell’s role as an AI infrastructure supplier—moving well past its old PC-only label.
Dell shares jumped 10.4% to $238.84 in afternoon action, just shy of their session peak at $238.91. That rally lifted the Round Rock, Texas company’s valuation to roughly $158.3 billion, market data showed.
Timing is critical. Investors are shifting how they value the companies supplying the hardware for AI models—think servers loaded with high-end chips used to train and operate artificial intelligence—after Advanced Micro Devices projected revenue that topped expectations and pointed to solid demand from data centers. Reuters noted Dell climbed 5.5% earlier Wednesday; Super Micro Computer made a bigger jump, and Hewlett Packard Enterprise barely budged.
There’s also another development. Dell announced Monday that its board unanimously backed a plan to switch the company’s state of incorporation from Delaware to Texas—a redomestication, legally speaking. Shareholders get to weigh in on June 25. Dell emphasized that the move won’t affect operations, management, strategy, assets, or where employees are based.
Michael Dell, the company’s chairman and chief executive, framed the decision as reconnecting with Dell’s origins. He started the company in Austin back in 1984. According to Dell, its headquarters, chief executive, and the biggest base of U.S. employees are now all in Texas. Shifting the legal base there, he said, simply mirrors “what we’ve been building here all along.” Securities and Exchange Commission
AI’s impact is front and center for the stock. Back in February, Dell projected its fiscal 2027 revenue from AI-optimized servers would reach around $50 billion—more than double, or 103% higher, than the previous year’s number. That comes after Dell closed over $64 billion in AI server orders for fiscal 2026, and kicked off the new year with a $43 billion backlog. “The AI opportunity is transforming our company,” chief operating officer Jeff Clarke said at the time. Dell Technologies
The upbeat tone in the market didn’t hurt. AMD pointed to solid demand for its data-center chips as customers shift focus from training AI models to real-world inference use. “AMD’s story is turning into a broader compute opportunity,” said Matt Britzman, senior equity analyst at Hargreaves Lansdown, noting the rising importance of both CPUs and graphics chips as AI workloads expand. Reuters
This is significant for Dell, which supplies the racks, servers, networking gear, and storage customers require to turn those chips into usable systems. Super Micro, meanwhile, is a closer match in the AI server space, with HPE sticking to the broader enterprise servers and infrastructure market. The rally shows investors remain eager to back companies viewed as key suppliers—picks and shovels, essentially—for the ongoing AI boom.
Risks aren’t off the table. According to Bloomberg Law, Dell’s proposal to shift its incorporation to Texas could tighten limits on shareholder proposals and make it tougher for investors to file derivative lawsuits—those are suits filed by shareholders acting for the company. Dell’s own proxy materials flag potential legal fights over the Texas move, and caution that not every expected advantage may materialize.
Chances of a tight vote look slim. In its SEC filings, Dell pointed out that Michael Dell and Silver Lake—its main shareholders—can essentially guarantee the redomestication proposal goes through. Dell also noted in the document that, if investors give the green light, the switch would take effect around July 1.
Right now, the stock’s movement hinges more on AI demand than any twists in corporate law. That could flip in a hurry. Memory-chip prices, server profit margins, and the rate of cloud investment are what will determine if Dell’s backlog sticks as lasting profit—or fades into yet another jam-packed hardware cycle.