Dell Technologies stock dropped around 5.5% Monday morning, falling to approximately $246, after UBS analyst David Vogt downgraded the stock from Buy to Neutral over the weekend.
Dell Technologies Inc., DELL
Vogt raised his price target to $243 from $167, but that new target actually sits about 7% below where the stock closed on Friday — a rare case where a higher price target still implies a sell signal.
The core argument is straightforward: Dell has executed well, but the market already knows it.
DELL had gained roughly 99% in 2026 alone before Monday’s dip, and around 142% over the prior 12 months. That compares to an 8.1% gain for the S&P 500 benchmark over the same stretch.
UBS projects 25% earnings growth for Dell in fiscal 2027 and 100% growth in the AI server segment. The problem is that investors appear to be pricing in something closer to 30–35% earnings-per-share growth — well above what UBS, or even Dell itself, is guiding toward.
Dell’s own long-term guidance points to midteens growth. So the math gets uncomfortable at current valuations.
UBS wasn’t dismissive of Dell’s business. Vogt praised the company’s “differentiated tech and supply chain strategy” and its ability to navigate rising input costs like memory prices.
But beyond fiscal 2027, UBS sees revenue growth slowing sharply — to just 6–7% in fiscal years 2028 and 2029. Any upward revisions to guidance, Vogt argued, are “likely already expected” by the market.
Dell’s rally has been driven by surging enterprise demand for AI-optimized servers, fueled by the rapid buildout of infrastructure to support large language models from companies like OpenAI and Anthropic.
The stock hit a 52-week high of $263.99 just days before the downgrade — almost the textbook definition of buying the news.
UBS isn’t alone in pulling back. The share of Wall Street firms rating Dell a Hold now stands at 31%, up from just 19% in January, according to FactSet data.
That shift reflects a growing view that the easy money in Dell’s AI trade may have already been made.
Dell also faces a potential opportunity: the U.S. government recently charged a co-founder of rival Super Micro Computer with allegedly violating export-control laws, which could open the door for Dell to gain market share.
The S&P 500 was essentially flat Monday, down just 0.03%, meaning the broader market wasn’t driving DELL’s slide — this was a stock-specific event.
Dell’s next earnings report is scheduled for May 28, 2026.
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