© Reuters. The Dell logo is seen on an item for sale in a store in Manhattan, New York City, U.S., November 24, 2021. REUTERS/Andrew Kelly/File Photo
(Reuters) -Dell Technologies forecast annual revenue and profit above Wall Street estimates on Thursday, betting on demand for its AI servers, sending the company’s shares up more than 16% in after hours trading.
Dell (NYSE:) is a beneficiary of rising demand for its AI-servers that are equipped with chip designer Nvidia (NASDAQ:)’s graphics processing units (GPUs), which helps in meeting the demands of high-performance computing.
“Our strong AI-optimized server momentum continues, with orders increasing nearly 40% sequentially and backlog nearly doubling, exiting our fiscal year at $2.9 billion,” Chief Operating Officer Jeff Clarke said in a statement.
The PC market is also showing green shoots following a slowdown in revenue that began in 2022 from the peaks touched during the pandemic, as the boom in work-from-home demand for PCs and electronics faded.
“We remain bullish on the coming PC refresh cycle and the longer-term impact of AI on the PC market,” CFO Yvonne McGill said on a post-earnings call.
Last week, Lenovo Group (OTC:) reported strong quarterly earnings, with revenue returning to growth after five quarters of decline.
The global PC market returned to 3% growth in the fourth quarter of 2023 and is now poised for a stronger recovery in 2024, data research firm Canalys said in January.
Dell expects fiscal 2025 revenue between $91 billion to $95 billion, the mid-point of which is above analysts’ average estimate of $92.07 billion, according to LSEG data.
It expects annual adjusted earnings per share of $7.50 plus or minus $0.25, compared with estimate of $7.15.
The company posted revenue of $22.32 billion for the quarter ended Feb. 2, slightly ahead of estimates of $22.16 billion. Excluding items, its profit per share came in at $2.20, compared with estimates of $1.73.
Revenue at the infrastructure solutions group, which includes its storage, software and server offerings, fell about 6% to $9.33 billion, while that of the client solutions group – home to PCs – fell nearly 12% to $11.72 billion.
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