Hewlett Packard Enterprise Co. (NYSE: HPE)
Company Overview
Hewlett Packard Enterprise has spent the better part of two years being overshadowed by its more glamorous infrastructure peers. While Nvidia, Dell, and the hyperscalers captured most of the AI narrative, HPE was quietly integrating its $14 billion acquisition of Juniper Networks and building out what has become one of the most underappreciated AI infrastructure plays on the market. Last night, after the close, that work showed up all at once.
HPE reported Q2 fiscal year 2026 results that produced its biggest earnings beat since February 2018: revenue of $10.68 billion grew 40% year-over-year, beating the $9.79 billion consensus by nearly $900 million. Non-GAAP EPS of $0.79 blew past both the $0.53 analyst consensus and HPE’s own prior guidance range of $0.51–$0.55 — a beat of nearly 50% against its own forecast. EPS grew 108% year-over-year. Free cash flow of $915 million improved $1.8 billion from the prior year. The stock surged 9% yesterday in anticipation, and is now up another 25% in today’s session to fresh multi-year highs near $59.
The most striking detail in the entire print had nothing to do with quarterly revenue or EPS. At HPE’s Securities Analyst Meeting in October 2025 — just eight months ago — management laid out a three-year plan targeting at least $3.00 in non-GAAP diluted EPS and $3.5 billion in free cash flow by fiscal year 2028. Last night, HPE raised its fiscal year 2026 guidance to $3.35–$3.45 in non-GAAP EPS and at least $3.5 billion in free cash flow. In plain terms: HPE is already two years ahead of its own long-term plan, and the driver is AI infrastructure demand that its own models had not fully anticipated.
Key Technical and Fundamental Drivers
Two Years Ahead of Plan → The Headline Nobody Expected Management’s own words on the call: HPE is now tracking two years ahead of its fiscal 2028 financial commitments. This isn’t a modest beat — it’s a fundamental validation that the Juniper acquisition and AI infrastructure demand have both accelerated beyond what even an optimistic internal plan assumed. Full-year FY2026 non-GAAP EPS guidance raised to $3.35–$3.45 against the $2.30–$2.50 range that was in place just one quarter ago — a raise of more than a full dollar at the midpoint, one of the largest single-quarter guidance increases in recent enterprise tech history.
Orders More Than Doubled → Record Company Backlog AI systems orders totaled $1.8 billion in Q2, bringing cumulative AI systems bookings to $16.4 billion. Total orders more than doubled year-over-year, far outpacing revenue, meaning HPE’s pipeline is refilling faster than it depletes. The company entered Q3 with $5.9 billion in AI systems backlog, with management noting the sales pipeline stands at “multiples of backlog.” Q3 revenue guidance of $11.5–$12.1 billion was issued, dramatically above what the Street had been modeling.
Juniper Integration → Ahead of Schedule, Margin Accretive The $14 billion Juniper acquisition — which many analysts viewed skeptically when announced — is now tracking ahead of integration schedule and ahead of plan on synergies. Networking revenue grew double digits on a normalized basis, campus and branch networking orders hit a record high growing in the upper-20% range, and enterprise data center switching orders increased nearly 20%. Networking operating margin of 21.6% was in line with guidance and is expected to improve in the second half as Juniper synergies ramp. HPE raised its cumulative FY2026 networks-for-AI order target to at least $2 billion.
Cloud and AI Segment → $7.7 Billion, Up 23% HPE’s Cloud and AI segment — the division covering AI-optimized servers, traditional compute, Alletra storage, and GreenLake private cloud software — generated $7.7 billion in revenue, up 23% year-over-year. Traditional server orders increased triple digits as customers modernize compute infrastructure and invest in AI inferencing. Alletra MP storage orders increased triple digits as well. CEO Antonio Neri said on the call that AI inferencing is expected to accelerate demand going forward — a statement that carries more weight when made by a company running two years ahead of its own plan.
108% EPS Growth → Free Cash Flow $1.8 Billion Better Than Prior Year EPS doubling in a single year is not a metric that shows up often in enterprise hardware. The $915 million in free cash flow — a $1.8 billion improvement year-over-year — reflects not just revenue growth but genuine operating leverage. HPE also refinanced $2 billion in debt, reducing annual net interest expense by approximately $75 million going forward. The company returned $343 million to shareholders in the quarter through dividends and buybacks while simultaneously investing in AI infrastructure capacity. Management said it expects to hit its 2x net leverage target ahead of schedule.
Market Takeaway
HPE’s Q2 report is the kind of print that forces a wholesale reconsideration of a stock’s long-term narrative. A company that management itself was targeting $3.00 EPS for in fiscal 2028 is now guiding $3.35–$3.45 for fiscal 2026 — with an initial fiscal 2027 framework already issued that implies continued growth from that already-elevated base. The Juniper acquisition, which was widely viewed as an expensive and risky bet when announced, is now revealing itself as the strategic masterstroke that positioned HPE at the intersection of AI infrastructure, networking, and private cloud at exactly the moment enterprise demand for all three is accelerating simultaneously.
The honest tension in evaluating HPE today is whether the 25% single-session surge, on top of 9% yesterday and 90%+ year-to-date gains entering this week, has compressed the near-term risk/reward for new buyers. The stock is moving to fresh multi-year highs on genuine fundamental improvement, and the $5.9 billion AI backlog entering Q3 provides revenue visibility that supports the elevated multiple. But the risks are real: Juniper margin improvement depends on synergy execution that is still ongoing; AI systems revenue can be lumpy quarter to quarter depending on customer delivery timing; and any moderation in hyperscaler AI capex spending would flow through HPE’s order book relatively quickly given its customer concentration. For traders watching Wednesday’s session, the key question is whether institutional buyers who missed the initial move use any intraday pullback as a reentry point — or whether the stock needs time to consolidate the two-day, 35%+ combined move before the next leg. A clean hold above $55 would be the level most technicians will be watching as the first test of whether the breakout has lasting support.