Dell Technologies just doubled down on the AI gold rush, announcing plans to ship $20 billion worth of AI servers in fiscal 2026—twice what it sold last year. Despite beating Q2 earnings expectations with $29.78 billion in revenue, shares tumbled 5% after hours as Dell's Q3 earnings guidance fell short of Wall Street's $2.55 per share target. The enterprise hardware giant is betting big on AI infrastructure demand even as traditional storage revenue softens.
Dell just made its boldest AI infrastructure bet yet. The Round Rock-based systems integrator announced Thursday it's targeting $20 billion in AI server shipments for fiscal 2026, effectively doubling what it sold last year as enterprises race to build out generative AI capabilities.
The ambitious projection came alongside mixed second-quarter results that beat revenue expectations but spooked investors with softer third-quarter guidance. Dell's shares fell more than 5% in after-hours trading despite posting $29.78 billion in Q2 revenue versus the $29.17 billion Wall Street estimate, according to CNBC's earnings coverage.
The market's lukewarm reaction centered on Dell's third-quarter earnings per share guidance of $2.45, which fell short of analysts' $2.55 consensus. However, the company's Q3 revenue outlook of $27 billion topped estimates of $26.1 billion, suggesting strong demand continues even if margins face pressure.
Dell's AI server business is experiencing explosive growth, with Servers and Networking revenue including AI systems jumping 69% annually to $12.9 billion in Q2. The company has shipped $10 billion worth of AI servers over the past two quarters alone, positioning itself as a critical middleman in the AI infrastructure buildout.
This positioning proves particularly valuable given Dell's relationship with Nvidia, where Dell serves as one of the chip giant's key customers. Dell purchases Nvidia's cutting-edge AI processors and builds complete systems around them, then sells those servers to end-users like cloud service provider CoreWeave, according to previous CNBC reporting.
The AI server surge comes as Dell's traditional businesses show signs of maturity. Storage revenue declined 3% to $3.86 billion, missing StreetAccount's $4.1 billion estimate. The shortfall reflects how enterprise IT budgets are shifting toward AI infrastructure at the expense of conventional storage systems.
Dell's client solutions group, which includes PC sales to enterprises, managed just 1% annual growth to $12.5 billion. Once the company's largest division, the PC business has been overshadowed by the data center boom as organizations prioritize AI capabilities over desktop refreshes.