We use cookies to understand how you use our site and to improve your experience.
This includes personalizing content and advertising.
By pressing "Accept All" or closing out of this banner, you consent to the use of all cookies and similar technologies and the sharing of information they collect with third parties.
You can reject marketing cookies by pressing "Deny Optional," but we still use essential, performance, and functional cookies.
In addition, whether you "Accept All," Deny Optional," click the X or otherwise continue to use the site, you accept our Privacy Policy and Terms of Service, revised from time to time.
You are being directed to ZacksTrade, a division of LBMZ Securities and licensed broker-dealer. ZacksTrade and Zacks.com are separate companies. The web link between the two companies is not a solicitation or offer to invest in a particular security or type of security. ZacksTrade does not endorse or adopt any particular investment strategy, any analyst opinion/rating/report or any approach to evaluating individual securities.
If you wish to go to ZacksTrade, click OK. If you do not, click Cancel.
As the earnings season winds down, I continue to be blown away by the magnitude of some of these beats, many of which are coming from AI-adjacent names that few would have expected to be headlining the cycle. While the marquee players like Nvidia, Alphabet and Meta Platforms are putting up enormous numbers and pouring billions into the buildout, I am continually surprised by results from names like Dell Technologies and Hewlett Packard, which play comparatively smaller roles in the broader tech ecosystem but are nonetheless beneficiaries of the massive buildout.
The story of 2026 isn't simply the sheer scale of AI infrastructure spending, but how rapidly and consistently expectations continue to move higher. At the end of last year, analysts projected hyperscaler capital expenditures of roughly $600 billion for 2026, already representing an impressive 36% increase from the prior year.
Following the latest earnings season, however, those estimates have been revised upward to approximately $750 billion, implying annual growth of 67%. Forecasts for 2027 are already teasing the $1 trillion level. Hyperscaler AI capex now represents approximately 2.2% of US GDP.
One earnings report I am eagerly awaiting is Oracle. While often overshadowed by the more prominent AI names, Oracle has made one of the most aggressive bets on the AI boom. Oracle has committed roughly $50 billion to AI, more than double its prior year and representing a capex-to-revenue ratio of approximately 76%, by far the highest in the hyperscaler cohort. A few months ago, I detailed here just how far founder Larry Ellison is willing to go to capitalize on this opportunity and why I believed the stock was compelling.
Oracle reports earnings on June 10, and with expectations rising alongside demand for AI infrastructure, the company enters the report with significant momentum behind it.
Earnings Tell the AI Story
As noted, the earnings results have been truly mind-bending.
Nvidia revenue spiked 85% to $81.6 billion and Alphabet’sGoogle Cloud posted a 63% revenue increase. Meanwhile Gemini Enterprise paid monthly active users grew 40% quarter over quarter. Meta’s revenue hit $56.31 billion, up 33% year over year, the fastest quarterly growth since 2021. META also raised Capex guidance to $125–$145 billion.
Dell may have been the most jaw-dropping beat. Record revenue of $43.8 billion came in 88% above the prior year, with diluted EPS up 282%. Dell booked $24.4 billion in AI orders and recognized $16.1 billion in AI server revenue in the quarter alone. Management guided to approximately $50 billion in AI revenue for the full fiscal year.
Hewlett Packard reported Q1 revenue of $10.68 billion, up 40% year over year. The company carried an AI server backlog of $5 billion, with management noting that Cloud and AI revenue is weighted toward the second half of the fiscal year as shipment timing catches up to demand.
As Dell and HP transform into AI infrastructure companies, their stocks have nearly doubled in the last month alone.
The Incoming Anthropic IPO
Perhaps the most vivid illustration of where all this infrastructure spend is going is the Anthropic IPO filing, announced this week. Anthropic confidentially submitted draft IPO paperwork just days after closing a $65 billion Series H funding round at a $965 billion post-money valuation, eclipsing rival OpenAI's valuation for the first time.
The company generated $4.8 billion in Q1 revenue and is projecting $10.9 billion for Q2, more than doubling in a single quarter, and is on pace for its first profitable quarter. Annualized revenue has reached $47 billion, up from $10 billion at the end of 2025.
IPO, targeting an October 2026 listing on Nasdaq, would rank among the largest technology debuts in Wall Street history and is expected to join SpaceX and OpenAI as one of three potential trillion-dollar listings this year.
Can AI Stocks Continue to Climb?
The Anthropic filing matters for investors in the AI infrastructure trade because it validates the demand side of the capex equation. Every dollar Dell ships in AI servers, every watt of data center capacity Oracle builds, every Nvidia GPU installed ultimately runs models like Claude. When Anthropic's revenue doubles in a single quarter at a nearly trillion-dollar valuation, it confirms that the demand absorbing all this infrastructure is real, scaling, and increasingly monetizable.
The AI boom isn't slowing down and appears to actually be accelerating. This is clearly demonstrated by the estimates that keep moving higher and the earnings that keep backing them up.
Why Haven't You Looked at Zacks' Top Stocks?
Since 2000, our top stock-picking strategies have blown away the S&P's +7.7% average gain per year. Amazingly, they soared with average gains of +48.4%, +50.2% and +56.7% per year.
Today you can access their live picks without cost or obligation.
Past performance is no guarantee of future results. Inherent in any investment is the potential for loss. This material is being provided for informational purposes only and nothing herein constitutes investment, legal, accounting or tax advice, or a recommendation to buy, sell or hold a security. No recommendation or advice is being given as to whether any investment is suitable for a particular investor. It should not be assumed that any investments in securities, companies, sectors or markets identified and described were or will be profitable. All information is current as of the date of herein and is subject to change without notice. Any views or opinions expressed may not reflect those of the firm as a whole. Zacks Investment Research does not engage in investment banking, market making or asset management activities of any securities. These returns are from hypothetical portfolios consisting of stocks with Zacks Rank = 1 that were rebalanced monthly with zero transaction costs. These are not the returns of actual portfolios of stocks. The S&P 500 is an unmanaged index. Visit https://www.zacks.com/performance for information about the performance numbers displayed in this press release.
Zacks' 7 Best Strong Buy Stocks (New Research Report)
Valued at $99, click below to receive our just-released report
predicting the 7 stocks that will soar highest in the coming month.
Image: Bigstock
Zacks Investment Ideas feature highlights: Nvidia, Alphabet, Meta, Dell, Hewlett and Oracle
For Immediate Release
Chicago, IL – June 4, 2026 – Today, Zacks Investment Ideas feature highlights Nvidia (NVDA - Free Report) , Alphabet (GOOGL - Free Report) , Meta Platforms (META - Free Report) , Dell Technologies (DELL - Free Report) , Hewlett Packard (HPE - Free Report) and Oracle (ORCL - Free Report) .
The AI Boom Is Even Bigger than We Thought
As the earnings season winds down, I continue to be blown away by the magnitude of some of these beats, many of which are coming from AI-adjacent names that few would have expected to be headlining the cycle. While the marquee players like Nvidia, Alphabet and Meta Platforms are putting up enormous numbers and pouring billions into the buildout, I am continually surprised by results from names like Dell Technologies and Hewlett Packard, which play comparatively smaller roles in the broader tech ecosystem but are nonetheless beneficiaries of the massive buildout.
The story of 2026 isn't simply the sheer scale of AI infrastructure spending, but how rapidly and consistently expectations continue to move higher. At the end of last year, analysts projected hyperscaler capital expenditures of roughly $600 billion for 2026, already representing an impressive 36% increase from the prior year.
Following the latest earnings season, however, those estimates have been revised upward to approximately $750 billion, implying annual growth of 67%. Forecasts for 2027 are already teasing the $1 trillion level. Hyperscaler AI capex now represents approximately 2.2% of US GDP.
One earnings report I am eagerly awaiting is Oracle. While often overshadowed by the more prominent AI names, Oracle has made one of the most aggressive bets on the AI boom. Oracle has committed roughly $50 billion to AI, more than double its prior year and representing a capex-to-revenue ratio of approximately 76%, by far the highest in the hyperscaler cohort. A few months ago, I detailed here just how far founder Larry Ellison is willing to go to capitalize on this opportunity and why I believed the stock was compelling.
Oracle reports earnings on June 10, and with expectations rising alongside demand for AI infrastructure, the company enters the report with significant momentum behind it.
Earnings Tell the AI Story
As noted, the earnings results have been truly mind-bending.
Nvidia revenue spiked 85% to $81.6 billion and Alphabet’sGoogle Cloud posted a 63% revenue increase. Meanwhile Gemini Enterprise paid monthly active users grew 40% quarter over quarter. Meta’s revenue hit $56.31 billion, up 33% year over year, the fastest quarterly growth since 2021. META also raised Capex guidance to $125–$145 billion.
Dell may have been the most jaw-dropping beat. Record revenue of $43.8 billion came in 88% above the prior year, with diluted EPS up 282%. Dell booked $24.4 billion in AI orders and recognized $16.1 billion in AI server revenue in the quarter alone. Management guided to approximately $50 billion in AI revenue for the full fiscal year.
Hewlett Packard reported Q1 revenue of $10.68 billion, up 40% year over year. The company carried an AI server backlog of $5 billion, with management noting that Cloud and AI revenue is weighted toward the second half of the fiscal year as shipment timing catches up to demand.
As Dell and HP transform into AI infrastructure companies, their stocks have nearly doubled in the last month alone.
The Incoming Anthropic IPO
Perhaps the most vivid illustration of where all this infrastructure spend is going is the Anthropic IPO filing, announced this week. Anthropic confidentially submitted draft IPO paperwork just days after closing a $65 billion Series H funding round at a $965 billion post-money valuation, eclipsing rival OpenAI's valuation for the first time.
The company generated $4.8 billion in Q1 revenue and is projecting $10.9 billion for Q2, more than doubling in a single quarter, and is on pace for its first profitable quarter. Annualized revenue has reached $47 billion, up from $10 billion at the end of 2025.
IPO, targeting an October 2026 listing on Nasdaq, would rank among the largest technology debuts in Wall Street history and is expected to join SpaceX and OpenAI as one of three potential trillion-dollar listings this year.
Can AI Stocks Continue to Climb?
The Anthropic filing matters for investors in the AI infrastructure trade because it validates the demand side of the capex equation. Every dollar Dell ships in AI servers, every watt of data center capacity Oracle builds, every Nvidia GPU installed ultimately runs models like Claude. When Anthropic's revenue doubles in a single quarter at a nearly trillion-dollar valuation, it confirms that the demand absorbing all this infrastructure is real, scaling, and increasingly monetizable.
The AI boom isn't slowing down and appears to actually be accelerating. This is clearly demonstrated by the estimates that keep moving higher and the earnings that keep backing them up.
Why Haven't You Looked at Zacks' Top Stocks?
Since 2000, our top stock-picking strategies have blown away the S&P's +7.7% average gain per year. Amazingly, they soared with average gains of +48.4%, +50.2% and +56.7% per year.
Today you can access their live picks without cost or obligation.
See Stocks Free >>
Media Contact
Zacks Investment Research
800-767-3771 ext. 9339
support@zacks.com
https://www.zacks.com
Past performance is no guarantee of future results. Inherent in any investment is the potential for loss. This material is being provided for informational purposes only and nothing herein constitutes investment, legal, accounting or tax advice, or a recommendation to buy, sell or hold a security. No recommendation or advice is being given as to whether any investment is suitable for a particular investor. It should not be assumed that any investments in securities, companies, sectors or markets identified and described were or will be profitable. All information is current as of the date of herein and is subject to change without notice. Any views or opinions expressed may not reflect those of the firm as a whole. Zacks Investment Research does not engage in investment banking, market making or asset management activities of any securities. These returns are from hypothetical portfolios consisting of stocks with Zacks Rank = 1 that were rebalanced monthly with zero transaction costs. These are not the returns of actual portfolios of stocks. The S&P 500 is an unmanaged index. Visit https://www.zacks.com/performance for information about the performance numbers displayed in this press release.