HP delivered second-quarter fiscal results showing revenue of $14.4 billion, marking a 9% climb from the same period last year and topping analysts’ projections of $14.07 billion. The company’s adjusted earnings per share of $0.86 substantially outperformed the $0.72 consensus forecast. Shares surged as much as 15% in extended trading immediately following the announcement.
The Personal Systems division demonstrated exceptional performance, generating $10.2 billion in quarterly revenue—a 13% year-over-year expansion. Enterprise PC sales increased 14%, while consumer PC revenue advanced 10%. Notably, overall PC shipment volumes declined 7%, indicating that revenue growth stemmed from elevated average selling prices rather than increased unit sales.
The Printing division maintained stability with $4.2 billion in revenue. However, operating profitability in this segment contracted to 18.3% compared to 19.2% in the year-ago period.
Demand for AI-enabled PCs emerged as a significant growth catalyst during the quarter. The percentage of AI-capable systems within HP’s PC portfolio expanded to 44% from just over 35% in the preceding quarter. Management anticipates this metric will reach 60–70% during the upcoming fiscal year and exceed 70% by fiscal 2028.
Under GAAP accounting standards, diluted earnings per share of $0.49 came in below the company’s previously issued guidance range of $0.52 to $0.58. This variance was primarily attributable to $365 million in restructuring expenses and other one-time charges.
The organization is contending with tightening memory chip availability, as data center requirements drive component pricing upward. Chief Financial Officer Karen Parkhill detailed multiple mitigation strategies HP is implementing: redesigning product configurations, procuring alternative lower-cost components, prioritizing higher-margin product lines, and implementing price adjustments that reflect elevated commodity expenses.
Management anticipates memory chip constraints will pressure operating profitability to its lowest point in the fourth quarter, with conditions expected to stabilize as fiscal 2027 approaches.
Interim Chief Executive Bruce Broussard commented: “During the second quarter, we continued executing our future of work strategy through intelligent devices, edge AI and connected experiences while navigating rising commodity costs.”
HP adjusted its full-year adjusted EPS guidance to $2.90–$3.10, lowering the upper boundary by $0.10. Under GAAP measures, annual earnings guidance dropped to $2.15–$2.45 per share from the prior range of $2.47–$2.77. The company also forecasts full-year free cash flow between $2.8 billion and $3.0 billion.
For the third quarter, HP projects adjusted EPS in the range of $0.61–$0.71.
Multiple Wall Street firms revised their valuation targets following the earnings release. JPMorgan increased its price objective from $22 to $26 while keeping a neutral stance. TD Cowen similarly adjusted its target to $26 with a hold rating. Barclays set a $19 target with an underweight position, and Wells Fargo established a $20 target, also with an underweight rating.
Despite the earnings outperformance, analyst sentiment remains cautious with a consensus “Reduce” rating and an average price target of $22.17, based on MarketBeat aggregated data. The stock currently receives two strong buy ratings, ten hold recommendations, and five sell ratings.
HPQ closed at $24.92 prior to the earnings announcement, within its 12-month trading range of $17.56 to $29.55.
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