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“Our AI momentum accelerated in Q2, and we’ve seen an increase in the number of enterprise customers buying AI solutions each quarter,” Jeff Clarke, vice chairman and chief operating officer, said in a statement. “AI-optimized server demand was $3.2 billion, up 23% sequentially, and $5.8 billion year-over-year. Backlog was $3.8 billion, and our pipeline has grown to several multiples of our backlog.”
More recently, Dell said in a regulatory filing that it expected additional job cuts. It’s limiting external hiring, reorganizing employees, and taking “other actions to align our investments with our strategic priorities and customer needs.”
“We anticipate these actions will result in a continued reduction in our overall headcount,” the filing said. “We believe our unique operating advantages provide a foundation to foster growth, drive efficiencies, and continue to position us for long-term success.”
While overall net revenue grew, the pricing environment became increasingly competitive, which primarily affected the gross margin performance of the company’s Client Solutions Group.
Dell said that it expects the group to see modest net revenue growth for the full fiscal year driven by the timing of the anticipated PC refresh cycle.
Last month, short-seller Hindenburg Research released a scathing report on Super Micro, claiming it had “found glaring accounting red flags, evidence of undisclosed related party transactions, sanctions and export control failures, and customer issues.”
The report said that companies like electric vehicle maker Tesla (TSLA) and AI chip heavyweight Nvidia (NVDA) are switching from Super Micro to Dell.
Hindenburg noted that Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang said, “Nobody is better at building end-to-end systems of very large scale for the enterprise than Dell.”
One day after the Hindenburg report was released, Super Micro said that it would not file its annual report on SEC Form 10-K for the fiscal year ending June 30 on time and expected to file a late filing notification.
In early August, Super Micro Computer missed analyst estimates for its fiscal fourth quarter and offered mixed guidance for the current period.
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