US Stocks Move | Q2 AI server profit margin narrows, raising concerns; Dell Technologies (DELL.US) drops nearly 10%
According to Golden Ten Data, on Friday, Dell Technologies (DELL.US) fell nearly 10%, closing at $121.06. In terms of news, the company’s second-quarter sales grew by 19% to $29.8 billion, higher than the average expectation of $29.2 billion. Adjusted earnings per share were $2.32, surpassing analysts’ average estimate of $2.30. The financial report showed that sales of artificial intelligence (AI) servers declined compared to the previous quarter, and the profit margin of these high-performance machines was lower than analysts’ expectations. In the second quarter ended August 1, Dell recorded $5.6 billion in AI server orders, down from $12.1 billion in the previous quarter. The company shipped servers worth $8.2 billion this quarter, with a backlog of orders valued at $11.7 billion at the end of the quarter.
In a statement on Thursday, Dell said its infrastructure division (including server and network sales) had an operating profit margin of 8.8% this quarter. Analysts’ average expectation was 10.3%. Dell’s overall adjusted gross margin was 18.7%, narrower than the same period last year and also below analysts’ expectation of 19.6%.
Disclaimer: The content of this article solely reflects the author's opinion and does not represent the platform in any capacity. This article is not intended to serve as a reference for making investment decisions.
You may also like
After bitcoin returns to $90,000, is Christmas or a Christmas crash coming next?
This Thanksgiving, we are grateful for bitcoin returning to $90,000.

Bitcoin security reaches a historic high, but miner revenue drops to a historic low. Where will mining companies find new sources of income?
The current paradox of the Bitcoin network is particularly striking: while the protocol layer has never been more secure due to high hash power, the underlying mining industry is facing pressure from capital liquidation and consolidation.

What are the privacy messaging apps Session and SimpleX donated by Vitalik?
Why did Vitalik take action? From content encryption to metadata privacy.

The covert war escalates: Hyperliquid faces a "kamikaze" attack, but the real battle may have just begun
The attacker incurred a loss of 3 million in a "suicidal" attack, but may have achieved breakeven through external hedging. This appears more like a low-cost "stress test" targeting the protocol's defensive capabilities.

