DELLQueued from the May 25, 2026 S&P 500 market-cap snapshot ranks 126-150; market-cap and rank are volatile and reviewed against CompaniesMarketCap on 2026-05-29.

Dell Technologies

Dell Technologies sells personal computers, servers, storage, networking products, software, and technology services.

Metadata

Where this company sits

Ticker
DELL
Rank snapshot
≈ 126
Sector
Information Technology
Industry
Technology Hardware, Storage & Peripherals
Region
United States
Index
S&P 500 · Top 150 by market cap

Metrics

Scoring view

Every metric is paired with a short rationale. The numbers are deliberate, not divine.

Moat

72.0/10

Scale procurement, enterprise support, financing, partner channels, and validated infrastructure configurations create a meaningful moat, especially in servers and storage, but commodity hardware limits uniqueness.

Decentralizability

48.0/10

Many workloads can run on standard or open hardware and Linux-based software, but Dell's value capture still depends on centralized manufacturing, branded support, and proprietary product integration.

Profitability

69.0/10

Dell reported fiscal 2026 net income of $5.936 billion on $113.538 billion of revenue, with operating income of $8.149 billion and segment operating profit from both ISG and CSG.

Price / Earnings

35.0x

Approximate trailing P/E derived from a $205.94 billion market capitalization divided by fiscal 2026 net income of $5.936 billion; this is a point-in-time derived estimate rather than a quoted ratio.

Market cap

$205.9B

CompaniesMarketCap reported Dell's market capitalization at $205.94 billion as of May 2026, with a May 28, 2026 end-of-day figure shown on the same page.

Freed-up capital potential

$0.0

Derived from market cap, moat resistance, decentralizability, and profitability. It is a directional estimate of value capture that could come under pressure if open alternatives compound.

Narrative

Why the company matters

A short editorial overview plus the current thesis on moat strength and decentralization pressure.

Business mix

Dell Technologies reports through Infrastructure Solutions Group and Client Solutions Group. In fiscal 2026, ISG generated $60.8 billion of revenue, led by servers, networking, storage, and a sharp rise in AI-optimized servers, while CSG generated $51.0 billion from commercial and consumer PCs, workstations, peripherals, and related services.

The company remains a scale hardware integrator: it combines supply-chain reach, enterprise sales relationships, support contracts, financing, and procurement standardization around branded compute infrastructure and PCs.

Moat reading

Dell's moat is strongest where enterprise buyers value validated configurations, global procurement, support, warranty coverage, financing, and lifecycle services more than raw component openness. Its AI server growth also benefits from supplier access, systems integration, and the ability to ship large configured infrastructure programs.

The moat is weaker in commodity client PCs and standardized x86 servers, where many core components are supplied by third parties and buyers can compare alternatives. Dell's defensibility comes less from proprietary hardware uniqueness and more from channel scale, operational execution, certifications, and service bundling.

Decentralization reading

Dell is not structurally decentralized: the business depends on centralized manufacturing, branded support, proprietary firmware and management layers, and enterprise procurement relationships. However, many underlying workloads run on open operating systems and standard hardware interfaces, which leaves room for open infrastructure projects to chip away at parts of the stack.

The most credible decentralization pressure comes from open hardware specifications, open firmware, repairable modular client devices, and secondary-market or cooperative refurbishment channels. These do not replace Dell's full enterprise model overnight, but they can reduce dependence on vertically branded hardware refresh cycles.

Products

Where the moat actually touches users

These pages zoom into the products and services that matter most to each company, the alternatives already nibbling at them, and 2 structured disruption concepts across the current product set.

2 disruption concepts tracked0 documented exceptions
Dell PowerEdge

enterprise servers

1 concept

PowerEdge is Dell's enterprise server family for rack, tower, edge, and AI-optimized infrastructure deployments.

Open analysis
Dell XPS

premium laptops

1 concept

Dell XPS is Dell's premium consumer laptop line focused on portability, battery life, industrial design, and high-end configurations.

Open analysis

Technology waves

Strategic lenses

These are the repo's explicit bias terms: the technologies expected to keep making incumbents less inevitable over time.

Printed electronics and PCB tooling

PCB fabrication, chip packaging, and increasingly automated electronics assembly continue shrinking the distance between prototype and local production.

  • Incumbents with hardware lock-in should be evaluated against a future of much cheaper custom electronics.
  • Pick-and-place automation lowers the coordination cost for distributed manufacturing cells.
  • The most durable hardware moats may migrate toward fabs, ecosystems, and compliance rather than assembly itself.
Microfactories and automated mini-home production

Small, software-defined manufacturing cells could make localized production less eccentric and more default.

  • Products with heavy branding but generic bill-of-materials profiles look increasingly vulnerable.
  • Logistics moats still matter, but their margin for arrogance should narrow.
  • Open-source production recipes can pressure both price and product differentiation.

Paper trail

Visible evidence trail

These sources shaped the scoring and writing. The site is opinionated, but it should not behave like it is improvising facts in a dark room.

Dell (DELL) Market Capitalization

CompaniesMarketCap · market data

Market-cap source used for the registry snapshot and approximate valuation metric.

Reviewed 2026-05-29

Free The World

Built as a research surface for tracking how AI, open source, Bitcoin rails, and distributed manufacturing steadily make legacy pricing models look like an elaborate historical accident.

Early-2026 public-source snapshot

Open source on GitHub

Commit 2970904 ·