Overview:

Dell Technologies opened 32% higher on May 29, 2026, following a record fiscal quarter that included $16.1 billion in AI server revenue and $24.4 billion in new AI orders. UBS raised its price target on Dell to $440 from $243, while Mizuho set a target of $350. On the downside, Ambarella fell 17.2%, AST SpaceMobile dropped 17.1%, and Gap lost 16%. The broader indices opened in positive territory, with the Russell 2000 outperforming at +0.57%.

NEW YORK — Dell Technologies blew the doors off Wall Street’s expectations overnight, and the market opened Friday morning still catching its breath.

📊 Trader’s Take
My read on this is straightforward: Dell is no longer trading on PC cycle dynamics. It’s trading on AI capex, and today’s print confirmed that the institutional money already moving into hyperscaler infrastructure is now following a second-order path directly into the hardware suppliers. The real question here is whether the $440 UBS target — still rated Neutral, which itself is a contradiction worth sitting with — marks the ceiling or a conservative reset. I’m watching $437.50, today’s intraday high, as the line in the sand. A sustained close above that level signals the gap holds and short-sellers don’t cover defensively — they capitulate. The risk: Dell’s guidance assumes AI capex spending accelerates through fiscal 2027. If hyperscaler CapEx commentary softens at any point this summer, this multiple compresses fast. Thirty-two percent in a session looks like a breakout. It could also be the best exit opportunity in months.

NEW YORK, May 29, 2026 — The S&P 500 opened at +0.16%, the Dow Jones Industrial Average at +0.13%, the Nasdaq at +0.20%, and the Russell 2000 led the broad market at +0.57%. The session’s character, though, belongs entirely to one company.

The Opening Bell Standout: Dell Technologies Rewrites Its Own Story

Dell Technologies (DELL) opened the session surging approximately 32%, trading near its intraday high of $437.50 before pulling back slightly to around $423.40, with a morning low of $418.39. The catalyst was Thursday evening’s fiscal Q1 2027 earnings report, which delivered numbers that reset the conversation around what AI infrastructure spending actually looks like at scale.

Full-year revenue came in at $43.8 billion, up 88% year over year. Diluted EPS hit $5.24 — up 282%. AI server revenue reached $16.1 billion, a 757% annual increase. Dell also disclosed $24.4 billion in new AI orders booked during the quarter and confirmed a $9.7 billion Pentagon contract that entrenches its position not just in commercial cloud but in sovereign and defense AI infrastructure.

Key Stat
$60B
Dell’s full-year FY2027 AI-optimized server revenue guidance — up 144% year over year. This single figure explains why UBS moved its price target from $243 to $440 in one session.
Data Visual
Dell AI Server Revenue Growth: FY2024–FY2027 Guidance
Shows the dramatic acceleration in Dell’s AI-optimized server revenue across fiscal years, giving traders a sense of the trajectory behind today’s price surge.
Dell AI Server Revenue Growth: FY2024–FY2027 Guidance
Values in $B

Dell’s full-year FY2027 revenue guidance was raised to a range of $165 billion to $169 billion, up from a prior range of $138 billion to $142 billion. Non-GAAP diluted EPS is now guided to $17.90 at the midpoint, a 74% year-over-year increase. These are not incremental beats — they represent a structural revision of what this business is worth.

Analyst Note
UBS analyst David Vogt raised his price target on Dell to $440 from $243 — an 81% revision in a single move — while maintaining a Neutral rating. Mizuho separately set a target of $350. The Neutral designation from UBS alongside a near-$440 target is an unusual combination: it suggests Vogt sees the fundamentals as undeniable but the near-term risk/reward as balanced at current prices. Of 29 analysts covering the stock, 18 carry Buy ratings, 9 Hold, and 2 Sell.

What’s Moving the Broader Tape

The macro backdrop on Friday morning is constructive, though not dramatically so. Reports that the U.S. and Iran reached a tentative agreement to reopen the Strait of Hormuz and initiate nuclear talks sent crude oil lower — West Texas Intermediate fell 1.4% to $87.66 per barrel and Brent slipped 1.3% to $92.47. Lower energy prices reduce input costs across industrials and logistics, providing a quiet tailwind to the broader tape even if the headline index moves look modest.

The Russell 2000’s outperformance at +0.57% is worth tracking. Small-caps tend to respond more directly to domestic macro relief — lower oil, easing credit conditions, or reduced geopolitical risk premium — than to single-stock earnings stories. As covered earlier this week in Can the Ceasefire Trade Survive a Friday Reality Check?, the durability of any Middle East-driven relief rally depends on whether today’s headlines survive the weekend news cycle. So far, the tape is treating the Hormuz development as real.

Okta (OKTA) added to the AI software narrative, posting Q1 FY2027 EPS of $0.91 against a consensus of $0.74, a 23% beat. CEO Todd McKinnon told CNBC that agentic AI deployments are pulling forward demand for identity management at a pace the company hadn’t modeled. Shares jumped 20% at the open. Super Micro Computer (SMCI) climbed 14%, continuing to benefit from the Dell halo effect in the AI server supply chain.

Data Visual
Opening Bell % Change: Top Movers on May 29, 2026
Compares the opening percentage moves across the day’s biggest individual stock movers, illustrating the divergence between AI infrastructure winners and today’s losers.
Opening Bell % Change: Top Movers on May 29, 2026
Values in %

On the negative side, Ambarella (AMBA) fell 17.2%, AST SpaceMobile (ASTS) dropped 17.1%, and Gap (GAP) lost 16%. NetApp (NTAP) — which also reported a beat Thursday evening, with EPS of $2.43 versus the $2.19 consensus and quarterly revenue up 12% year over year — was a more muted story but still positive, supported by a multiyear Google Cloud agreement that drove a 14% increase in product revenue. All-flash revenue for FY2026 reached $4.2 billion.

The broader AI infrastructure buildout theme is examined in more depth in Is the Semiconductor Surge Broad Enough to Last? — the key question being whether today’s SMCI and DELL moves represent sector rotation with legs or concentrated capital chasing a single narrative.

Why the Consensus Might Be Underpricing the Risk

The bull case for Dell writes itself today: record revenue, record EPS, record AI orders, a Pentagon contract, and guidance that nearly doubles prior expectations. What doesn’t write itself is the scenario where this unravels. Dell’s $60 billion AI server revenue target for FY2027 requires that hyperscaler capital expenditure — from Microsoft, Amazon, Google, and Meta — continues accelerating. Any softness in cloud spending commentary during the summer earnings cycle would hit Dell’s multiple faster than most hardware names because the current valuation embeds that acceleration as a certainty, not a probability.

There’s also a concentration dynamic. A meaningful portion of Dell’s AI server demand traces back to a small number of large hyperscaler customers. The $9.7 billion Pentagon contract diversifies that exposure somewhat, but government procurement cycles carry their own risk — budget resolutions, continuing resolutions, and procurement delays that don’t show up in order backlogs until quarters later. Thirty-two percent in a session is the market pricing in a best-case continuation. That’s the version worth questioning.

For broader context on how Friday’s macro data feed is interacting with this tape, see Will Friday’s Secondary Data Seal the Week’s Yield Retreat?

Levels That Define the First Hour

For DELL specifically, the opening range between $418.39 and $437.50 becomes the reference frame for the session. A hold above $420 suggests institutional buyers are absorbing early profit-taking; a break below $418 opens the door to a fill-the-gap move toward the $380–$390 range. The 52-week low of $106.38 is a footnote that illustrates just how dramatic the re-rating has been — this stock has quadrupled in under a year on the strength of a single product cycle.

For the broader market, the S&P 500’s modest gains are consistent with a tape that is data-driven but not directionally committed on a Friday session heading into a weekend with geopolitical variables still in play. Volume in the first 15 minutes skewed toward technology and communication services, with energy lagging on the crude selloff. The Russell 2000 outperformance signals the market is reading the Hormuz news as durable — for now.

Level / Event Value Signal
DELL intraday high $437.50 Sustained break above signals short capitulation and gap-and-go continuation
DELL opening range support $418.39 Break below opens gap-fill risk toward $380–$390 zone
OKTA median analyst target $100.00 Post-earnings gap toward this level tests whether street upgrades follow; watch for target revisions midday
WTI Crude $87.66 Hold below $88 supports Russell 2000 outperformance and broad macro relief narrative
UBS DELL price target $440.00 Neutral-rated ceiling; close above forces analyst community to reassess; watch for upgrades from Hold-rated desks

The opening session on May 29 is shaping up as a tale of two tapes: AI infrastructure names pricing in a multi-year spending cycle at full confidence, and a handful of growth names reminding the market that not every business is riding that wave. Dell’s 32% move is the loudest single-stock signal of the week. Whether it holds or reverts by the close is the cleanest test of whether institutional conviction is as deep as the pre-market order book suggested it was. Watch $418 on the downside and $437 on the upside — the answer will arrive in the price.


This article is published by PreMarket Daily for informational purposes only. Nothing here constitutes financial advice, investment recommendations, or an offer to buy or sell any securities. Always consult a qualified financial professional before making investment decisions.

James Whitfield is our pre-market analyst at PreMarket Daily, covering U.S. equity futures, overnight movers, earnings releases, and the macro catalysts that set the tone before the 9:30 AM ET open. James...