logo
Dell execs sound alarm with consumer comments

Dell execs sound alarm with consumer comments

Yahoo01-06-2025
Dell execs sound alarm with consumer comments originally appeared on TheStreet.
Jeff Clarke was feeling the love.
Clarke, vice chairman and chief operating officer of Dell Technologies () , was giving analysts the rundown on the tech company's first-quarter report.
💵💰Don't miss the move: Subscribe to TheStreet's free daily newsletter 💰💵
The report included a backlog of orders for confirmed artificial intelligence systems valued at $14.4 billion.
"We love where the backlog is," Clarke said during the Round Rock, Texas, computer maker's earnings call. "It's healthy."
He said Dell was off to a good start "but we have much in front of us.""The customer deployments that we have in front of us are large, they're complex, they have very detailed scheduled deliveries," Clarke said. "There's lots of dependencies on this. We've talked about this business being lumpy and nonlinear."
While AI momentum remained strong, he said, "given the scale of these opportunities, variability and timing and choices around technology, the inherent nonlinear nature of demand and associated shipments is likely to persist."
Dell's fiscal-first-quarter earnings missed Wall Street expectations, but the revenue number beat estimates and the forecast for the current quarter was stronger than Wall Street expected.
Clarke told analysts that Dell executed very well in the quarter, "achieving growth across our core markets." Demand for AI-optimized servers was "exceptionally strong," he said.
More Tech Stocks:
Palantir gets great news from the Pentagon
Analyst has blunt words on Trump's iPhone tariff plans
OpenAI teams up with legendary Apple exec
Dell built "on the momentum discussed in February and further [demonstrated] that our differentiation is winning in the marketplace," he said, referring to the company's previous quarterly report.
"We had over $12 billion in AI orders this quarter alone, which will drive significant revenue growth and EPS," he said.
Still, Clarke said "the consumer market remains challenged."
"Consumer revenue declined 19% and the industry pricing remained competitive," he said.
Yvonne McGill, Dell's chief financial officer, said the company was expecting "subseasonal performance in traditional server and storage, our larger profit pools that provide scale, as customers evaluate their IT [spending] for the year given the dynamic [macroeconomic] environment."
"We saw strong performance across small and medium business and large enterprise," she said. "In consumer, the demand environment remains soft and profitability remains challenged."
McGill said Dell was focused on executing within the Client Solutions Group to capture the Microsoft () Windows PC refresh.
Clarke said that while the PC refresh remains behind prior cycles, "we are seeing indicators that the installed base is upgrading to new Windows 11 PCs, many of them AI PCs."
Dell is one of AI-chip maker Nvidia's () primary vendors, and the U.S. Department of Energy said its Doudna computer, due in 2026, will use technology from the two tech companies.
The computer, named for the Nobel Prize-winning scientist Jennifer Doudna, who made key Crispr gene-editing discoveries, will be housed at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory in Berkeley, Calif., Reuters reported.
Dell shares are down nearly 35% from a year ago and off 3.4% this year.
Several investment firms issued research reports after the company reported its results.
Bank of America Securities raised its price target on Dell to $155 from $150 and affirmed a buy rating on the shares.
Earnings came in at the low end of guidance due to modest tariff impacts to margins at Client Solutions and slightly weaker growth from Intelligent Security Systems, the company's video-management and -analytics software solutions, the investment firm said.At "the highest level," B of A said Dell could deliver significantly higher AI server revenue over the next two years of greater than $30 billion with strong upside to EPS with momentum in AI servers picking up.
JP Morgan raised its target on Dell to $125 from $111 and maintained an overweight rating, according to The Fly.
AI-server demand and orders in Q1 as well as greater than typical deployment expectations for Q2 "were the bright spot in an otherwise subdued outlook," JP Morgan wrote.
Dell's traditional Enterprise demand drivers are softer and driving incremental caution into the back half of the year, the firm said.
TD Cowen analyst Krish Sankar boosted the firm's price target on Dell Technologies to $125 from $120 and reiterated a hold rating.
He called the $12 billon of April-quarter AI-server orders and expected July-quarter AI shipments of roughly $7 billion key positives.
The macroeconomic environment might present a modest headwind for traditional server and consumer demand while tariffs and commodity costs are inflationary factors.Dell execs sound alarm with consumer comments first appeared on TheStreet on Jun 1, 2025
This story was originally reported by TheStreet on Jun 1, 2025, where it first appeared.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Boeing's fighter jet workers in the St. Louis area reject a contract offer
Boeing's fighter jet workers in the St. Louis area reject a contract offer

Yahoo

time9 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Boeing's fighter jet workers in the St. Louis area reject a contract offer

Boeing Co. expects more than 3,200 union workers at three St. Louis-area plants that produce U.S. fighter jets to strike after they rejected a proposed contract Sunday that included a 20% wage increase over four years. The International Machinists and Aerospace Workers union said the vote by District 837 members was overwhelmingly against the proposed contract. The existing contract was to expire at 11:59 p.m. Central time Sunday, but the union said a 'cooling off' period would keep a strike from beginning for another week, until Aug. 4. Union leaders had recommended approving the offer, calling it a 'landmark' agreement when it was announced last week. Organizers said then that the offer would improve medical, pension and overtime benefits in addition to pay. The vote came two days before Boeing planned to announce its second quarter earnings, after saying earlier this month that it had delivered 150 commercial airliners and 36 military aircraft and helicopters during the quarter, up from 130 and 26 during the first quarter. Its stock closed Friday at $233.06 a share, up $1.79. The union did not say specifically why members rejected the contract, only that it 'fell short of addressing the priorities and sacrifices' of the union's workers. Last fall, Boeing offered a general wage increase of 38% over four years to end a 53-day strike by 33,000 aircraft workers producing passenger aircraft. 'Our members are standing together to demand a contract that respects their work and ensures a secure future,' the union said in a statement. Dan Gillan, general manager and senior Boeing executive in St. Louis, said in a statement that the company is 'focused on preparing for a strike.' He described the proposal as 'the richest contract offer' ever presented to the St. Louis union. 'No talks are scheduled with the union,' said Gillan, who is also vice president for Boeing Air Dominance, the division for the production of several military jets, including the U.S. Navy's Super Hornet, as well as the Air Force's Red Hawk training aircraft. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

Boeing's fighter jet workers in the St. Louis area reject a contract offer
Boeing's fighter jet workers in the St. Louis area reject a contract offer

Associated Press

time11 minutes ago

  • Associated Press

Boeing's fighter jet workers in the St. Louis area reject a contract offer

Boeing Co. expects more than 3,200 union workers at three St. Louis-area plants that produce U.S. fighter jets to strike after they rejected a proposed contract Sunday that included a 20% wage increase over four years. The International Machinists and Aerospace Workers union said the vote by District 837 members was overwhelmingly against the proposed contract. The existing contract was to expire at 11:59 p.m. Central time Sunday, but the union said a 'cooling off' period would keep a strike from beginning for another week, until Aug. 4. Union leaders had recommended approving the offer, calling it a 'landmark' agreement when it was announced last week. Organizers said then that the offer would improve medical, pension and overtime benefits in addition to pay. The vote came two days before Boeing planned to announce its second quarter earnings, after saying earlier this month that it had delivered 150 commercial airliners and 36 military aircraft and helicopters during the quarter, up from 130 and 26 during the first quarter. Its stock closed Friday at $233.06 a share, up $1.79. The union did not say specifically why members rejected the contract, only that it 'fell short of addressing the priorities and sacrifices' of the union's workers. Last fall, Boeing offered a general wage increase of 38% over four years to end a 53-day strike by 33,000 aircraft workers producing passenger aircraft. 'Our members are standing together to demand a contract that respects their work and ensures a secure future,' the union said in a statement. Dan Gillan, general manager and senior Boeing executive in St. Louis, said in a statement that the company is 'focused on preparing for a strike.' He described the proposal as 'the richest contract offer' ever presented to the St. Louis union. 'No talks are scheduled with the union,' said Gillan, who is also vice president for Boeing Air Dominance, the division for the production of several military jets, including the U.S. Navy's Super Hornet, as well as the Air Force's Red Hawk training aircraft.

Boeing's fighter jet workers in the St. Louis area reject a contract offer
Boeing's fighter jet workers in the St. Louis area reject a contract offer

Washington Post

time11 minutes ago

  • Washington Post

Boeing's fighter jet workers in the St. Louis area reject a contract offer

Boeing Co. expects more than 3,200 union workers at three St. Louis-area plants that produce U.S. fighter jets to strike after they rejected a proposed contract Sunday that included a 20% wage increase over four years. The International Machinists and Aerospace Workers union said the vote by District 837 members was overwhelmingly against the proposed contract. The existing contract was to expire at 11:59 p.m. Central time Sunday, but the union said a 'cooling off' period would keep a strike from beginning for another week, until Aug. 4. Union leaders had recommended approving the offer, calling it a 'landmark' agreement when it was announced last week. Organizers said then that the offer would improve medical, pension and overtime benefits in addition to pay. The vote came two days before Boeing planned to announce its second quarter earnings, after saying earlier this month that it had delivered 150 commercial airliners and 36 military aircraft and helicopters during the quarter, up from 130 and 26 during the first quarter. Its stock closed Friday at $233.06 a share, up $1.79. The union did not say specifically why members rejected the contract, only that it 'fell short of addressing the priorities and sacrifices' of the union's workers. Last fall, Boeing offered a general wage increase of 38% over four years to end a 53-day strike by 33,000 aircraft workers producing passenger aircraft. 'Our members are standing together to demand a contract that respects their work and ensures a secure future,' the union said in a statement. Dan Gillan, general manager and senior Boeing executive in St. Louis, said in a statement that the company is 'focused on preparing for a strike.' He described the proposal as 'the richest contract offer' ever presented to the St. Louis union. 'No talks are scheduled with the union,' said Gillan, who is also vice president for Boeing Air Dominance, the division for the production of several military jets, including the U.S. Navy's Super Hornet, as well as the Air Force's Red Hawk training aircraft.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store