The IT products manufacturer and e-commerce merchant reported a 19% increase in revenue to more than $21 billion for the period ended May 4.

Dell Technologies Inc., the world’s largest private technology company, reported an upbeat fiscal first quarter, signaling the improving corporate IT spending environment has boosted its fortunes.

Revenue climbed 19% to $21.4 billion in the period ending May 4, the Round Rock, Texas-based company said in a statement Monday. Adjusted earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortization jumped 33% to $2.38 billion. Net income excluding some items soared 54% to $1.17 billion from a year earlier. Dell is No. 8 in the B2B E-Commerce 300.

Dell has sought to position itself to support artificial-intelligence and internet-of-things applications.

CEO Michael Dell has been considering strategic options for the computer- and server-maker, such as a combination with software affiliate VMware Inc. or an initial public offering for Dell. The company tried to revamp itself as a cloud player by offering customers software from a suite of smaller companies in which it’s invested, in a bid to take back sales from Amazon.com Inc. and Microsoft Corp.

In April, Dell pursued an IPO for Pivotal Software Inc., a software and service company tucked into its empire. Some of its other investments also entered public markets last quarter.

This has helped boost Dell’s cash and investments balance, which stood at $21.7 billion at the end of the last quarter—an increase of $6.7 billion from a year earlier. The company paid down $3.1 billion of its $40 billion in debt so far this fiscal year, most of which stemmed from its 2016 purchase of EMC Corp.

advertisement

Demand for Dell’s servers and networking rose 41% to $4.59 billion last quarter, and the company leads the market in server shipments, according to technology research and advisory firm Gartner Inc.

Dell has fostered tighter product integrations with VMware that help manage customer workloads with Dell hardware and VMware software. The companies also each sell the other’s products to existing and new customers.

Like rival Hewlett Packard Enterprise Co., Dell has prioritized high-end servers that offer more computing power—systems that often have greater profit margins per unit. The company has sought to position itself to support artificial-intelligence and internet-of-things applications, which it believes could boost demand for hardware to process more information at the so-called “edge,” away from central data centers.

Dell’s storage hardware business grew 10% to $4.08 billion. Less-specialized alternatives have struggled in the public-cloud era, when companies can keep data lodged with Amazon Web Services or Microsoft Azure, but analysts have seen Dell out-competing the market, which its EMC arm has competed in since the 1970s.

advertisement

“Storage systems spending is forecasted to grow 9.8% year-over-year in the first quarter of 2018 and we expect, when IDC releases first-quarter market share, Dell EMC’s storage business will outperform the market and gain share,” said Matt Eastwood, an analyst at industry research firm IDC.

Dell’s computer unit rose 14% from a year earlier, to $10.3 billion in sales last quarter—driven by commercial sales to businesses. The company’s computer market share has grown significantly, according to IDC.

Sign up for a complimentary subscription to B2BecNews, a newsletter published four times a week with coverage of technology and business trends in the growing B2B e-commerce industry. B2BecNews is owned by Vertical Web Media LLC, which also publishes DigitalCommerce360.com, Internet Retailer and Internet Health Management.

Follow us on LinkedIn and be the first to know when new B2BecNews content is published. 

advertisement
Favorite