Dell and ServiceNow power enterprise AI rally on blowout Q1 results, S&P 500 marks ninth straight weekly gain

Dell Technologies surged 33% in its best session on record after a first-quarter earnings blowout, triggering a broad enterprise AI rotation. ServiceNow, Oracle, Palantir, and CrowdStrike led a software rally as the S&P 500 marked its ninth straight winning week.

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AI stocks daily - $DELL $NOW $ORCL chart May 29 2026

Dell Technologies Inc. (NYSE: DELL) erupted 32.8% in its best single session on record after first-quarter earnings and revenue shattered consensus estimates by a wide margin, triggering a broad rotation into enterprise AI software names. The S&P 500 added 0.2% to 7,580, the Nasdaq Composite edged up 0.2% to 26,973, and SOXX slipped a fraction to 569.08, closing out the market's ninth consecutive winning week.

Today's biggest movers

Ticker Close Day 1mo YTD
$DELL $420.91 +32.76% +101.44% +229.35%
$NOW $124.37 +14.38% +40.83% -15.65%
$SMCI $46.09 +11.60% +68.21% +48.87%
$ORCL $225.78 +10.84% +39.90% +15.36%
$DDOG $247.35 +9.82% +87.12% +84.91%
$INTC $114.68 -5.14% +21.38% +191.21%
$GOOGL $380.34 -2.51% -1.16% +20.69%
$TSM $418.45 -1.51% +5.65% +30.93%
$NVDA $211.14 -1.45% +5.80% +11.80%
$TSLA $435.79 -1.43% +14.19% -0.52%

Dell surges 33% on record-breaking earnings; AI hardware thesis confirmed

Dell Technologies Inc. (NYSE: DELL) posted its largest single-day gain since its 2018 re-listing after first-quarter fiscal 2027 results obliterated Wall Street estimates across every line. Earnings per share came in at $4.86 against a consensus of $2.93, a 66% beat, while full-year fiscal 2026 revenue rose 18.8% to $113.54 billion. Management raised forward guidance, signaling that enterprise customers are accelerating AI server and storage procurement at a pace that has outrun even the most bullish models. Volume on DELL exceeded 38 million shares, more than three times the 90-day average, as funds scrambled to add exposure. The Infrastructure Solutions Group, which houses Dell's AI server business, drove the upside, with hyperscaler and sovereign AI customers placing orders that stretched out delivery schedules well into fiscal 2028. The board also approved a 20% quarterly dividend increase to $0.63 per share beginning next fiscal year. In the words of one sell-side note circulating after the print, the quarter was a "clean sweep": a simultaneous beat on revenue, margin, EPS, and guidance.

Related startups

The session's 33% surge is a continuation of a theme this publication has tracked across multiple sessions this month. As noted in our May 22 recap, Dell's AI server backlog had already signaled the depth of enterprise demand; today's results supplied the hard confirmation. The 27-analyst consensus carries a Buy rating with a 12-month price target near $429, which the stock surpassed in a single session.

ServiceNow soars 14% as enterprise AI rotation takes hold

ServiceNow Inc. (NYSE: NOW) surged 14.4%, its largest single-session move in over a year, as Dell's blowout print triggered a wholesale reassessment of enterprise software valuations. The backdrop was already constructive: ServiceNow had beaten Q1 2026 estimates in its own right, delivering earnings per share of $0.97 against a consensus of $0.80, a 21% outperformance, and revised its full-year 2026 subscription revenue guidance to $15.74 billion to $15.78 billion, implying approximately 22% year-over-year growth. The company reported broad-based adoption of its AI workflow products and expanding large-deal activity. Analysts covering the stock characterized NOW's AI governance and workflow automation layer as "directly in the path of enterprise AI spending," a category growing faster than the broader software market. The 39-analyst consensus carries a Buy rating with an average price target of $143, leaving meaningful upside from current levels. Notably, NOW's YTD performance had lagged the broader AI software cohort, down 15.7% coming into today, which made the name attractive to rotation buyers seeking valuation discount relative to growth.

As covered in yesterday's session recap, enterprise AI names had already shown early signs of re-acceleration; today's Dell catalyst accelerated that process across the entire software stack.

Oracle extends cloud AI momentum on guidance beat

Oracle Corp. (NYSE: ORCL) added 10.8% to $225.78, continuing to build on its most recent quarterly results, which showed EPS of $1.79 against a consensus of $1.70 and delivered bullish fiscal 2027 guidance. Wedbush raised its ORCL price target to $275 from $225, maintaining an Outperform rating, citing Oracle's strengthening position in AI cloud infrastructure as a complement to its core database franchise. The 43-analyst consensus target of $244 now sits within reach, and the stock's month-to-date gain of 39.9% reflects a substantial institutional re-rating. Oracle's cloud infrastructure business has benefited from AI model training demand and an expanding roster of hyperscaler partnerships that extend well beyond its traditional enterprise customer base. With a market cap now approaching $620 billion, Oracle has re-entered the tier of the largest publicly-traded technology companies for the first time since its peak in early 2024.

Palantir and CrowdStrike lead AI software security re-rating

Palantir Technologies Inc. (NYSE: PLTR) gained 9.2% to $156.54 as momentum investors continued to price in the company's revised revenue outlook. On May 4, Palantir reported Q1 2026 revenue of $1.63 billion, an 85% year-over-year increase, and raised its full-year 2026 revenue guidance to $7.65 billion to $7.66 billion, implying roughly 71% growth. The 21-analyst consensus has reached a Buy rating with an average price target of $183.73 per compiled estimates. CrowdStrike Holdings Inc. (NASDAQ: CRWD) advanced 8.9% to $731.00, driven by a wave of pre-earnings price target upgrades ahead of the company's June 3 results. Jefferies raised its target to $775 from $500; Oppenheimer lifted it to $750 from $500; Benchmark and Wedbush both moved to $700 on May 27. The 52-analyst consensus firmly favors the stock at Buy. CrowdStrike's cybersecurity AI platform thesis, that consolidated security platforms displace point solutions as AI threat vectors proliferate, has gained renewed traction across the sell side heading into what promises to be a heavily watched print.

Notable but quieter

Super Micro Computer Inc. (NASDAQ: SMCI) climbed 11.6% to $46.09, riding Dell's validation of AI server procurement cycles. SMCI's own Q3 report on May 5 showed gross margin recovery that came in nearly 50% above analyst estimates, though revenue of $10.24 billion missed as customer power and networking delays pushed revenue recognition into subsequent quarters. The stock has gained 68% over the past month despite ongoing legal headwinds, including a class action suit alleging server supply irregularities. Palo Alto Networks Inc. (NASDAQ: PANW) advanced 9.3% to $281.69 on dual analyst upgrades on May 27: Wedbush raised its target to $300 and Benchmark to $270, both ahead of Palo Alto's scheduled June 2 earnings. Datadog Inc. (NASDAQ: DDOG) extended post-earnings momentum, adding 9.8% to $247.35; the company beat Q1 2026 estimates on May 7, reporting EPS of $0.60 versus a $0.42 consensus, and the 33-analyst Buy consensus targets approximately $202. Microsoft Corp. (NASDAQ: MSFT) rose 5.5% to $450.24, while Broadcom Inc. (NASDAQ: AVGO) gained 4.7% to $446.77 and Arm Holdings plc (NASDAQ: ARM) added 5.4% to $353.29, extending a remarkable YTD run of 207.9% as infrastructure-adjacent names moved in sympathy with the broader enterprise AI rotation. Salesforce Inc. (NYSE: CRM) also added 8.5% to $191.10, positioning ahead of its own June 3 earnings report.

Intel slides on valuation downgrade; Alphabet and Nvidia pull back

Intel Corp. (NASDAQ: INTC) dropped 5.1% to $114.68, the session's steepest decliner, after Northland Capital Markets downgraded the stock from Outperform to Market Perform on May 27 and suspended its price target. The analyst cited valuation concerns following Intel's 191% YTD gain through Thursday, arguing that anticipated operational improvements have been more than fully priced in at current levels. The hold-rated 31-analyst consensus carries an average target of $87.76, now well below the current trading price. Alphabet Inc. (NASDAQ: GOOGL) slipped 2.5% to $380.34 without a company-specific driver; the decline appears to be profit-taking after a strong prior session, with Alphabet's one-month return now fractionally negative at -1.16%. NVIDIA Corp. (NASDAQ: NVDA) edged down 1.5% to $211.14 despite recording the session's highest dollar volume, with more than 230 million shares changing hands; the near-flat-to-down action amid heavy volume suggests accumulation on weakness rather than distribution.

What to watch next week

Hewlett Packard Enterprise reports fiscal Q2 2026 results on June 1, with analysts focused on its AI networking order book and "Networks for AI" program targeting $1.7 billion to $1.9 billion in orders by fiscal year end. Palo Alto Networks posts fiscal Q3 2026 results on June 2, after close, with consensus expecting revenue of $2.94 billion and year-over-year growth of 28% to 29%. Salesforce and CrowdStrike both report on June 3, setting up a back-to-back in enterprise software that will either confirm or challenge this week's rotation thesis. Oracle is next scheduled on June 16. On the macro front, any Fed commentary on the interest rate path and progress on trade policy normalization could move risk appetite across the AI cohort, which remains disproportionately sensitive to discount rate assumptions. For context on how the infrastructure thesis has built over the past two weeks, the May 21 recap on the AI infrastructure supercycle remains relevant reading.

Not investment advice.

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