Dear readers,
On Thursday we wrote that the AI investment thesis was entering its most demanding phase — that the market was sorting ruthlessly between companies spending on AI and companies earning from AI. We asked whether software firms could convert capabilities into durable, profitable revenue. Dell Technologies just answered that question, and the answer has nothing to do with software.
Dell Delivers the Quarter of the Year
Dell’s first-quarter results for fiscal 2027 are not merely good. They are historically lopsided. Revenue surged 88 percent to $43.8 billion. Adjusted earnings per share landed at $4.86, obliterating a consensus range of $2.94 to $2.99 by more than 60 percent. The stock jumped nearly 40 percent in pre-market trading on Friday, pulling the entire hardware complex higher — Hewlett Packard Enterprise gained 17 percent, Super Micro rose 10 percent, NetApp climbed 15 percent.
The engine is AI-optimized servers, where Dell recorded $16.1 billion in quarterly revenue, a 757 percent year-over-year increase. The order backlog for AI servers has swelled to $51.3 billion. A fresh $9.7 billion Pentagon defense contract added further fuel. Management raised full-year revenue guidance to a range of $165 billion to $169 billion. For context: that upper bound would make Dell’s annual revenue roughly equivalent to the entire GDP of Hungary.
From Software Anxiety to Hardware Dominance
Thursday’s newsletter examined Salesforce posting strong numbers and still getting sold. That dynamic now looks like a preview of a broader divergence. Across corporate America, what some analysts are calling the AI cost panic of 2026 is forcing companies like Uber and Microsoft to ration employees’ AI usage as spending on inference tokens blows through budgets months ahead of schedule.
Simultaneously, increasingly capable autonomous agents — the kind Anthropic and others are building — are threatening the per-seat licensing model that has powered enterprise software for two decades. Data and analytics firms like RELX, Thomson Reuters, and Gartner have absorbed heavy selling pressure as investors reprice the risk. The billions that tech giants are pouring into AI infrastructure are landing directly on Dell’s and Nvidia’s income statements. The software companies processing those workloads are still searching for margins that justify their multiples.
The Physical Limits of an Infrastructure Boom
Dell’s constraint is not demand. It is physics. Data center construction costs are approaching $12 million per megawatt, driven in part by a 20 percent increase in labor costs. More than 140 citizen groups across the United States are now actively opposing new data center projects. In Vineland, New Jersey, residents have filed suit over noise pollution from cooling systems at a planned AI facility. In Michigan, a $16 billion project tied to Oracle and OpenAI — part of the Stargate initiative — was initially blocked and remains mired in legal disputes.
For Dell shareholders riding a 40 percent single-day gain, this is the question that matters most over the next twelve months: the company has $51 billion in orders it needs to fulfill, and fulfillment depends on power grids, building permits, and local politics that no earnings call can control.
Macro Relief: Oil Drops, German Inflation Eases
Geopolitics offered a reprieve on Friday. Reports of a possible 60-day extension of the U.S.-Iran ceasefire pushed Brent crude down roughly 2 percent to approximately $92 per barrel, with WTI settling near $87. That is a meaningful retreat from the $96 level that was compressing equity valuations earlier in the week.
The energy relief is visible in European data. Preliminary state-level figures from Germany suggest May inflation dropped to around 2.6 percent, down from the 2.9 percent April reading that had spiked during the worst of the Iran tensions. The DAX held steady near 25,100 on Friday afternoon, tracking toward a weekly gain of just under one percent. For U.S. investors still digesting last week’s 3.8 percent PCE print, the German data is a reminder that disinflation remains possible when energy prices cooperate — a dynamic the Fed will be watching closely if the ceasefire holds.
Crypto Outflows Deepen, Blue Origin Stumbles
Two sectors sat out the broader rally. Bitcoin traded near $73,500 on Friday, with spot ETFs recording outflows for the ninth consecutive session — more than $700 million drained between May 21 and May 28 alone. The sustained institutional exit suggests something more structural than a short-term positioning adjustment.
In the space sector, the explosion of an unmanned Blue Origin New Glenn rocket on the launch pad sent sympathy selling through the entire group. AST SpaceMobile dropped 14.5 percent. The incident is a reminder that commercial space remains a venture-stage bet dressed in public-market clothing.
What This Means
The AI trade has cleaved cleanly in two. On one side: companies building physical infrastructure — servers, networking equipment, power systems — are converting unprecedented capital expenditure budgets into revenue growth that would have seemed implausible eighteen months ago. Dell’s 88 percent revenue increase is not a rounding error. It is a company being reshaped by the largest infrastructure buildout since the fiber-optic boom of the late 1990s.
On the other side: software companies are caught between rising input costs, uncertain monetization, and the existential threat that autonomous agents pose to subscription pricing. Thursday’s Salesforce story and Friday’s Dell blowout are two frames of the same film. The money flowing into AI is real. Where it accumulates as profit is becoming unmistakable.
The near-term macro variable is whether President Trump approves the negotiated Iran ceasefire extension. If he does, lower energy prices could ease the inflation pressure that has kept the Fed locked in place. If he does not, the hardware trade still has $51 billion in Dell backlog orders as a floor. Have a great weekend.
Best regards,
The StocksToday.com Editorial











