Is Dell Technologies a Value Play — or a Value Trap?

 | Nov 30, 2022 15:19

  • Based on guidance for the fourth quarter, DELL is trading at less than 6x this year’s earnings
  • That ‘cheap’ multiple could be justified only if profit declines are on the way
  • Pulled-forward demand and secular headwinds suggest they might be
  • Before the pandemic, in fiscal 2020 (ending January), Dell Technologies (NYSE:DELL) posted adjusted net income of $5.5 billion. Roughly $2.3 billion of that figure was generated by VMware Inc (NYSE:VMW), which Dell spun off last year. That left about $3.2 billion in net profit from the current Dell business.

    In fiscal 2023, at the midpoint of fourth-quarter guidance, Dell expects to post adjusted net profit of $5.6 billion. The core question for DELL stock is whether that growth is good news — or the biggest reason to stay away.

    h2 A Pandemic Winner/h2

    There’s no question that, on a fundamental basis, DELL is cheap. After last week’s third-quarter report, the company gave guidance for the fourth quarter. Dell forecast adjusted earnings per share of $1.50 to $1.80.

    At the midpoint of that guidance, the full-year figure would come in at $7.46. That, in turn, puts the stock’s price-to-earnings multiple under 6x, one of the lowest in the entire large-cap universe.

    The question is: Why is DELL so cheap? Obviously, markets have sold off this year, but that alone doesn’t explain such a low multiple.