FILE PHOTO: Dell logo is seen in this illustration taken August 19, 2025. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo

By Jaspreet Singh

(Reuters) -Dell raised its annual revenue and profit forecasts on Thursday, buoyed by demand for its artificial intelligence-optimized servers that are powered by Nvidia's advanced chips.

Shares fell around 5% in extended trading as Dell's third-quarter profit outlook was below analysts' estimates.

Rising demand for AI servers, capable of handling computational needs of AI workloads, is benefiting companies such as Dell and Super Micro Computer, but the high cost of producing them and tough competition have pressured margins.

Dell now expects $20 billion in fiscal 2026 revenue from AI server shipments, up from its prior forecast of $15 billion. Its AI servers are used by customers, including Elon Musk's AI startup xAI and CoreWeave.

It booked $5.6 billion in AI orders in the second quarter and shipped a record $8.2 billion, leaving an overall backlog of $11.7 billion.

The company raised its annual revenue forecast to be between $105 billion and $109 billion from its earlier expectations of $101 billion and $105 billion.

Dell expects adjusted earnings per share of $9.55, up from its prior projection of $9.40.

Third-quarter revenue forecast of $26.5 billion to $27.5 billion was above analysts' average estimate of $26.05 billion, according to data compiled by LSEG.

Adjusted profit forecast for the quarter of $2.45 per share was below estimates of $2.55 per share.

Revenue for the second quarter came in at $29.78 billion, beating estimates of $29.17 billion. Excluding items, it reported adjusted profit of $2.32 per share, slightly beating estimates of $2.30 per share.

Adjusted gross margin rate fell to 18.7% from a year earlier and missed estimates of 19.6%.

Dell's revenue for the infrastructure solutions group, which includes its storage, software and server offerings, rose 44%, while the client solutions group - home to PCs - grew 1%.

A strong PC refresh cycle is expected after Microsoft ends support for Windows 10 in October.

About half of PCs in use still run Windows 10, with many unable to upgrade and likely needing replacement, said Ben Yeh, principal analyst, PC research at Omdia.

(Reporting by Jaspreet Singh in Bengaluru; Editing by Vijay Kishore)