Dell Stock Hits All-Time High, Up 225 Percent Since March 2020

Dell Technologies’ stock is currently trading at an all-time high just weeks before its planned VMware spin-off, which the IRS recently said will be “tax-free.”

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Just weeks before its planned spin-off of VMware, Dell Technologies’ stock is trading at an all-time high of $105.65 per share.

The Round Rock, Texas-based infrastructure and PC giant’s stock price has been slowly, but steadily rising since November after exceeding many of Wall Street’s financial earnings expectations quarter after quarter during the COVID-19 pandemic with PC sales hitting record highs.

When the global COVID-19 pandemic first hit the U.S. in March 2020, Dell’s stock fell to a low of $32.49 per share. Dell’s stock has since soared 225 percent to $105.65 per share as of Thursday morning.

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[Related: Michael Dell On New Book: ‘It’s Not All Pretty…But It’s Real]

Michael Dell told CRN this month he’s bullish about his company’s future regardless of industry supply chain shortages and Dell’s upcoming spin-off of VMware.

“We’ve never been more optimistic about our ability to innovate, delight customers and deliver growth, and create value for all of our shareholders in the coming years,” said Michael Dell (pictured) in an exclusive interview with CRN. “We have leadership positions in large, stable, expanding markets and strong underlying fundamentals. We’re driving a differentiated strategy to seize the tremendous growth that’s ahead of us.”

Dell is scheduled to spin off its 81 percent stake in VMware to Dell Technologies shareholders in November 2021, the biggest of which is Michael Dell. VMware will pay a special cash dividend of between $11.5 billion to $12 billion to the company’s shareholders, which will include around $9.5 billion for Dell Technologies.

IRS Confirms VMware Spin-Off Will Be Tax-Free

Dell Technologies recently received confirmation from the U.S. Internal Revenue Service (IRS) that the spin-off will be tax-free, which is great news for Dell and shareholders.

Last week, Dell Technologies received a “favorable private letter ruling” from the IRS which “confirmed the tax-free status of its planned spin-off of VMware for U.S. federal income tax purposes,” according to a Dell filing on Sept. 27 with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.

Dell’s goal with the spin-off is to simplify its capital structures, help Dell achieve investment-grade credit ratings and provide the company with funding to reduce its core debt stemming from its $67 billion acquisition of EMC and VMware in 2016. Michael Dell is set to own approximately 42 percent of VMware following the spin-off, while also remaining Chairman of the Board at Palo Alto, Calif.-based VMware.

JPMorgan Bullish On Dell

Dell’s stock soaring to new heights also comes after JPMorgan refreshed its outlook and positioning this week relative to the IT hardware sector.

The global investment and banking firm reiterated an ‘overweight’ rating on Dell Technologies due to the company benefiting from current IT buying trends.

“We prefer overweight rated Dell given exposure to more resilient commercial PCs, as well as server and storage market, in addition to the inexpensive valuation of core Dell,” wrote JPMorgan in a note.

Dell’s PC business has been on fire, hitting new heights quarter over quarter in its fiscal year 2022, which began Feb. 1, 2021.

Dell generated a record second fiscal quarter of $26.1 billion in revenue, up 15 percent year over year. Sales by Dell’s Client Solutions Group—which includes PCs, laptops, notebooks and monitors—climbed a whopping 27 percent year over year to $14.3 billion, with a record operating income of nearly $1 billion.

Despite industry supply shortages, Dell shipped a record number of PCs and displays in the second quarter, which Michael Dell attributed to his company’s stellar supply chain.

“Our buying power is a lot larger than many of the competitors, including [Hewlett Packard Enterprise], and we have strong [supply chain] relationships. At the end of the day, business is at some level about relationships, and these folks have known us for a long time. … We’re kind of like the permanent customer–and that matters,” said Dell. “We’re working proactively with the strong relationships we have to minimize the impact to our customers.”