A few catalysts are coming into play for computer giant HP Inc. (HPQ): the AI PC and the Windows refresh cycle.
HP’s fiscal second quarter stabilized a bit from a lackluster showing in the preceding quarter, the company reported Wednesday afternoon.
The company’s sales increased in its personal systems segment, due to commercial clients upgrading their computers ahead of Microsoft ending support for Windows 10 in October 2025.
HP CEO Enrique Lores told Yahoo Finance that the upgrade cycle fueled stronger than expected PC demand by businesses.
Companies are also upgrading units still in use from the pandemic.
“The installed base has aged, and now people both small companies and large companies, realize that they need to change that,” Lores explained.
Sales and units of HP’s personal computers fell in the quarter.
Printer sales continued to be a tough business, amid pricing pressure from Japanese competitors such as Canon.
Sales of consumer printers declined 16%, with commercial sales off by 12%.
The coming AI PC could potentially brighten the earnings for companies like HP and rival Dell (DELL).
Earlier in May, HP unveiled its AI PCs coined the HP OmniBook X AI and the HP EliteBook Ultra AI. Both computers have much faster processors, to better handle AI related applications such as Microsoft’s (MSFT) copilot features and OpenAI prompts.
Around the same time, Dell took the wraps off five AI centric new computers.
Lores say about 10% of PCs sold in 2024 will be of the AI variety, ramping to 60% in three years.
The earnings rundown
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Net sales: $12.8 billion (-0.8% year over year) vs. $12.6 billion estimate
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Personal systems sales: $8.4 billion (3% year over year) vs. $8.28 billion estimate
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Printers sales: $4.4 billion (-8% year over year) vs. $4.38 billion estimate
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Diluted EPS: $0.82 (+4% year over year) vs. $0.81 estimate (guidance: $0.76-$0.86)
What else caught our attention
HP isn’t the only tech giant entering a new era of AI. Listen below on what Amazon AWS CEO Adam Selipsky said on the latest ‘Opening Bid‘ podcast about the company’s plans for AI.
Brian Sozzi is Yahoo Finance’s Executive Editor. He is also the host of the “Opening Bid” podcast. Follow Sozzi on Twitter/X @BrianSozzi and on LinkedIn. Tips on deals, mergers, activist situations, or anything else? Email [email protected]. Are you a CEO and want to come on Yahoo Finance Live? Email Brian Sozzi.
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