Business
Dell Technologies Stock Tumbles Again Friday as AI-Server Rally Faces Mounting Valuation Pressure Concerns
Shares of Dell Technologies fell sharply again Friday, dropping 5.26%, or $21.54, to $387.97 in midday trading, extending a multi-day slide that has pulled the AI-server hardware maker well off its recent highs.
The decline marks the latest leg of a pullback that began earlier this week, as investors reassess how much further Dell’s extraordinary AI-fueled rally can run after the stock’s value more than tripled over the past year.
A dramatic run now in reverse
Friday’s losses continue a stretch of heavy selling that has wiped out a meaningful chunk of Dell’s recent gains. Dell Technologies closed Thursday at $409.45, down 5.51%, following a broader profit-taking phase after a significant AI-server rally, and weakened further in pre-market trading Friday to $400.00, down another 2.31%.
The stock’s longer-term trajectory still tells a story of explosive growth, even after this week’s pullback. Dell’s longer-term trend remains firmly bullish, with the stock up roughly 226% over the past 12 months, trading well above every major moving average even after Tuesday’s earlier drop in the same selloff. The stock’s 52-week high of $469.47 was set on June 1, 2026, while its 52-week low of $110.22 came on January 21, 2026 — underscoring just how dramatic the run higher has been this year.
An analyst downgrade adds to the pressure
Much of this week’s selling has been tied directly to a single research note questioning whether Dell’s valuation has run ahead of its fundamentals. GF Securities downgraded Dell to Hold from Buy on June 24, citing valuation concerns even as the broader AI-driven rally in the stock continues to be debated on Wall Street.
The firm’s specific concern centered on how much of Dell’s anticipated AI revenue growth is already reflected in the share price. GF Securities argued that Dell’s AI revenue upside — including expectations of more than $70 billion in AI-related revenue — is already well anticipated by the market after the stock’s extraordinary multi-hundred-percent rally since its fiscal fourth-quarter results.
Not every analyst has turned negative on the stock, however. Several firms have continued raising price targets even amid this week’s volatility. Recent analyst actions include Piper Sandler maintaining an Overweight rating with a $497 price target on June 24, Morgan Stanley raising its price target to $477 on June 23 while keeping an Equal-Weight rating, and Goldman Sachs maintaining a Buy rating with a raised price target. Overall, analysts maintain a Buy consensus on Dell with an average price forecast of $472.06.
Rising memory costs squeezing margins
Beyond the valuation debate, Dell’s drop has also coincided with a broader dynamic playing out across the technology hardware sector: surging memory chip prices that are raising costs for companies that build servers and PCs. Dell’s drop this week doesn’t have a single confirmed catalyst, but it likely reflects the flip side of the memory squeeze rattling markets — Dell builds servers and PCs that buy memory, so the rising prices benefiting memory makers translate into input-cost pressure for Dell’s box-making business.
That pressure has already shown up in Dell’s own financial results. In Dell’s most recent quarter, the company posted revenue of $43.84 billion, up 88% year over year, alongside AI-optimized server revenue of $16.13 billion, up 757% year over year. Yet gross margin compressed to 18% from 21% a year earlier, with management attributing the pressure to a mix shift toward lower-margin AI servers.
Insider selling adds to investor unease
Compounding the valuation and margin concerns, Dell has also seen a steady drumbeat of insider stock sales in recent months, a pattern that tends to weigh on investor sentiment even when it doesn’t necessarily signal a change in company fundamentals. Persistent insider selling, with insiders having offloaded over $1.5 billion in shares over the prior three months, has maintained a supply overhang that has reinforced cautious sentiment around the stock.
A specific transaction this week added to that narrative. Dell director Lynn Vojvodich Radakovich sold 12,022 shares in a Rule 10b5-1 transaction on June 22, 2026, a sale that contributed to the stock gapping down on heavy volume in subsequent trading and follows the broader pattern of insiders offloading $1.56 billion in shares over the past three months.
New debt adds to the balance sheet
Dell has also been raising additional capital even as it continues investing heavily in its AI server business. The company recently completed a $3 billion senior unsecured notes offering across three tranches maturing between 2031 and 2037, with interest rates up to 5.250% — a debt issuance that increases the company’s leverage and long-term interest burden, which could compress margins further if demand for AI-optimized hardware experiences cyclical cooling.
Where the stock stands technically
From a chart perspective, traders are watching a series of specific price levels to gauge whether the selloff has further to run. Key support levels sit at $400 and $389, while resistance remains at $411.62 and $428.63, with technical indicators showing mixed signals as momentum readings flash caution even though the broader trend indicator suggests the longer-term move remains meaningful.
Some market analysts have framed the pullback as a natural, even healthy, pause after an unusually steep run rather than a fundamental shift in Dell’s outlook. After a 224% run this year through Wednesday’s close, some profit-taking in Dell stock is hardly surprising, and one red trading session after that kind of rally isn’t necessarily a thesis change.
What’s ahead for Dell
Investors will get a clearer picture of how the AI server business is actually performing when Dell reports its next round of quarterly results. Dell is expected to report fiscal second-quarter results on August 27, 2026, with Wall Street anticipating earnings of $4.83 per share, up from $2.32 a year earlier, on revenue of $44.47 billion compared with $29.78 billion in the prior-year quarter.
For now, Dell remains caught between two competing narratives: a company riding a historic surge in AI server demand that has more than tripled its stock price over the past year, and a valuation that some analysts believe has already priced in much of that future growth. With memory costs rising, insiders continuing to sell shares, and at least one major firm now urging caution, Friday’s decline suggests that debate is far from settled — even as Dell’s underlying AI server revenue continues to grow at a pace few companies in the hardware sector can match.
Business
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Uber: I Love Buying This Dip
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STRF: Senior Preferred, Double Digit Tax Deferred Yield, High Asset Coverage (NASDAQ:STRF)
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Form 4 Faeth Therapeutics, Inc For: 26 June

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Hyperscale Data, Inc. (GPUS) Shareholder/Analyst Call Transcript
Milton Ault
Founder & Executive Chairman
All right, everybody. Welcome to the conference call today. This is on Hyperscale Data in our robotics campus, Artificial Intelligence of the future of the Michigan data center and Montana sites. I apologize if anyone could hear us prior to the call. That was a technical snafu. But luckily, we didn’t say anything that we didn’t want everyone to hear anyways. So Gary, why don’t we read the forward-looking statements, and we’ll go from there.
Unknown Executive
Okay. Forward-looking statements. This presentation and other written or oral statements made from time to time.
Milton Ault
Founder & Executive Chairman
Gary, can you change the slide, please?
Unknown Executive
This presentation and other written or oral statements made from time to time by representatives of Hyperscale Data Inc., the company, contain forward-looking statements within the meaning of Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933 as amended, Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 as amended. Forward-looking statements reflect the current view about future events. Statements that are not historical in nature such as forecasts for the industry in which we operate and which may be identified by the use of words like expects, assumes, projects, anticipates, estimates, we believe, could be, future or the negative of these terms and other words of similar meaning are forward-looking statements.
Such statements include, but not limited to, statements contained in this presentation relating to our business, business strategy, expansion, growth, products and services we may offer in the future and the timing of their development, sales and marketing strategy and capital outlook. Forward-looking statements are based on management’s current expectations and assumptions regarding
Business
Oracle Shares Slip Again as AI Spending Concerns and Tech Selloff Continue to Pressure the Stock Friday
Shares of Oracle continued their retreat Friday, falling 0.90% to $151.22 in midday trading, as the database and cloud-computing giant remains caught in a broader market reassessment of how much technology companies should be spending — and borrowing — to fund the artificial intelligence buildout.
The decline, while modest on its own, extends a punishing stretch for Oracle that has seen the stock fall dramatically from its highs earlier this year, even as the company’s underlying cloud business continues to post strong growth.
A stock far removed from its peak
Oracle’s current price tells only part of the story without context from where the stock has traveled this year. The stock’s 52-week high of $345.72 was set on September 10, 2025, while its 52-week low of $134.57 came on April 10, 2026. At Friday’s level near $151, shares remain much closer to that low than to the highs reached less than a year ago — a decline that reflects a dramatic shift in how investors are pricing Oracle’s aggressive AI infrastructure bet.
That volatility has been particularly pronounced in recent weeks. Oracle is on pace for its worst month since 2001, a sharp reversal following the strongest month in a generation — the stock had surged 39.9% in May, its best monthly performance since February 2000, driven by enthusiasm over the company’s AI-related order backlog.
The earnings report that triggered the slide
Much of Oracle’s recent struggles trace back to its fiscal fourth-quarter earnings report, which beat Wall Street’s expectations on the surface but rattled investors over the company’s spending plans. Oracle reported adjusted earnings of $2.03 per share, ahead of the $1.96 analysts had expected, on revenue of $19.18 billion versus a $19.10 billion estimate, with revenue up 21% year over year. Despite beating those numbers and raising its profit forecast, the stock still tumbled. Shares dropped 10% in extended trading after Oracle disclosed plans to raise more money to finance its AI buildout, with the company saying it foresees raising $40 billion through additional debt and equity financing, including a previously announced $20 billion share sale.
The scale of that financing push, layered on top of what the company had already raised, is what spooked investors. That $40 billion in fresh financing comes after Oracle already raised $43 billion in debt and $5 billion in equity during fiscal 2026 — a combination that has concerned investors given lingering uncertainty about whether demand for artificial intelligence can ultimately justify that much new capital.
The cash flow picture behind the spending
The financial commitments tied to Oracle’s AI expansion have shown up clearly in its cash flow statements. For the fiscal year, Oracle reported $23.7 billion in negative free cash flow, with depreciation nearly doubling to $7.62 billion, while capital expenditures jumped 162% to $55.7 billion. Looking ahead, the company has signaled spending will remain elevated. Oracle’s new chief financial officer, Hilary Maxson, said the company’s net cash outlay for capital expenditures in fiscal 2027 will be around $70 billion, excluding $20 billion to $25 billion in prepayments from customers and timing impacts.
A workforce reshaped around AI priorities
Alongside the spending increases, Oracle has been making significant changes to its workforce as it reorients the business toward AI and cloud infrastructure. Oracle’s recent regulatory disclosures show a notable restructuring that reduced its workforce by 13%, alongside a record $638 billion in remaining performance obligations. Coverage of the filing put a more specific number on those job losses. Oracle disclosed in its latest annual report that it cut about 21,000 jobs over the past fiscal year, shrinking its workforce roughly 13% as the company reshapes its business around AI.
Where the demand is coming from
Despite the financial strain, Wall Street has pointed to one customer in particular as the anchor behind Oracle’s massive backlog of future business. Bank of America analysts, who recommend buying Oracle shares, said over 50% of the company’s remaining performance obligation comes from OpenAI. Oracle’s leadership has also emphasized the physical scale of the infrastructure buildout underway. Oracle CEO Clay Magouyrk said on a conference call with analysts that the company is looking to bring online almost one gigawatt worth of computing power in the current quarter alone, roughly matching the total brought online for all of fiscal 2026.
That data center expansion has continued to draw outside investment as well. Related Digital and Blackstone said they secured funding for a $16 billion Oracle data center site in Michigan.
Mixed signals from analysts
Not all of Friday’s pressure traces back to the broader AI spending debate — some of it appears tied to company-specific financing mechanics. One recent analyst note warned that preferred stock conversions and at-the-market equity issuances may dilute shareholders and pressure Oracle’s stock price.
Even so, some independent analysis has pushed back on the idea that Oracle’s long-term growth story is in jeopardy. Investment firm Evercore said Oracle’s 10-K filing further strengthens the view that the company’s outlook for fiscal 2027 remains intact, despite ongoing investor concerns about the scale of its spending.
Part of a broader sector retreat
Friday’s dip in Oracle shares is unfolding alongside declines across much of the rest of the technology sector, as investors reassess AI-related valuations more broadly following a long rally. Several of the market’s largest technology names were trading lower in the same session, reflecting a pattern of selling that has spread well beyond any single company’s specific circumstances.
What investors are watching next
With Oracle’s next earnings report not expected until September, investors are likely to spend the coming weeks parsing the company’s spending disclosures, its OpenAI-anchored backlog, and broader sentiment around AI infrastructure investment for clues about where the stock goes from here. Oracle delivered more than 1.2 gigawatts of data center capacity in fiscal 2026, underpinning 77% year-over-year growth in its cloud infrastructure business — a figure bulls point to as evidence that demand remains robust even as the stock continues to struggle. Whether that underlying growth can eventually outweigh concerns about Oracle’s ballooning capital needs remains the central question hanging over the stock as it searches for a floor well below its highs from less than a year ago.
Business
Outlook For AI Chip Sector: The Party Goes On, Bigger Than Ever (NASDAQ:SOXX)
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Seeking Alpha’s Disclosure: Past performance is no guarantee of future results. No recommendation or advice is being given as to whether any investment is suitable for a particular investor. Any views or opinions expressed above may not reflect those of Seeking Alpha as a whole. Seeking Alpha is not a licensed securities dealer, broker or US investment adviser or investment bank. Our analysts are third party authors that include both professional investors and individual investors who may not be licensed or certified by any institute or regulatory body.
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Three unusual things about the King’s tax bill
Another thing not detailed in the report is what proportion of the Privy Purse income has been spent by the King personally and what proportion of it has been spent for official royal duties.
This matters because the King only voluntarily pays tax on income spent personally, meaning the King can effectively deduct royal business from his tax bill.
The King also does not pay tax on the Sovereign Grant, which is money paid from the Treasury to the Royal Household to pay for official duties.
This system is a bit like how a self-employed person can file expenses on their self-assessment tax return for things like uniform or training.
Except that the King has two tax-free ways in which he can he can fund official duties.
Also, what counts as official duties is very different from what a regular self-employed taxpayer can expense.
For example, the untaxed Sovereign Grant can be used to fund the staff costs and running expenses of the King’s official household while untaxed official duties that can be paid by Privy Purse include the personal income of working members of the Royal Family.
The Keeper of the Privy Purse, James Chalmers, said: “While Royal finances can sometimes appear complex, the underlying system is clear in principle, structured in law and refined over time to ensure the Monarch can serve with independence, accountability and in the long-term interests of the nation.”
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