Growth investing strategies, like looking for buyable growth stocks, are popular for a reason—and Dell Technologies (DELL) might just be one to consider. When done with a focus on quality and a long-term perspective, growth investing has the potential to help investors build life-changing, generational wealth.
What do I mean by quality? I look for businesses that are firmly established within their industries. It’s easier to achieve strong revenue and earnings growth in sectors that consistently expand, which is another factor I prioritize in potential investments. I also insist on investment-grade balance sheets.
This brings me to Dell Technologies. After reviewing the company’s recent earnings report and growth catalysts, I believe it could be a worthwhile growth stock to buy now. Here’s why.
One reason for my bullish sentiment on Dell stock is its Fiscal second quarter financial results for the period ended August 2nd. The company posted $25 billion in net revenue for the quarter, up 9.1% from the prior year. For context, that was $910 million ahead of analysts’ expectations. Strong growth in the company’s Infrastructure Solutions Group segment (e.g., data storage, AI servers, and cloud services) easily offset a slight revenue decline in the Client Solutions Group segment (i.e., workstations, PCs, and monitors).
Dell’s non-GAAP diluted EPS surged 8.6% year-over-year to $1.89 for the Fiscal second quarter, significantly surpassing the analyst consensus of $1.71. CFO Yvonne McGill noted that an AI-optimized server mix and more competitive pricing led to a 230 basis point decline in gross margin to 21.8% of revenue for the quarter. This was partially offset by a nearly 2% reduction in the share count, which led bottom-line growth to roughly match top-line growth for the quarter.
Dell’s outlook further supports my Buy rating on the stock. Each quarter, the company becomes more of an AI play. In the past year, the quickly growing Infrastructure Solutions Group segment rose from nearly 37% of revenue in Q2 2024 to almost 47% in Q2 2025—a nearly 10 percentage point swing. The company envisions its total addressable market expanding from $1.2 trillion in 2019 to $2.1 trillion by 2027, driven by segments like servers and storage.
On a more company-specific level, Dell is performing reasonably well. AI infrastructure shipments almost doubled quarter-over-quarter, and the company has shipped $6.5 billion in AI infrastructure over the past 12 months. Additionally, Dell’s five-quarter pipeline of prospective shipments is several multiples of its backlog. As these are converted into actual shipments, this should boost growth.