
Hewlett Packard Enterprise has posted its strongest earnings beat in years and is using the moment to argue that its $14 billion Juniper Networks acquisition is paying off faster than sceptics expected.
The company reported record quarterly revenue of $10.7 billion, up 40 percent year-on-year, with networking revenue hitting $2.7 billion. AI systems orders reached $1.8 billion, and investors pushed the share price higher after the results were released.
CEO Antonio Neri framed the quarter as validation of HPE’s aggressive networking strategy, telling analysts that the Juniper deal has been “a home run” and insisting “the strategy is working.”
That confidence marks a shift from the mood when HPE first moved to buy Juniper. The $14 billion price tag drew investor scepticism and the deal spent months in regulatory limbo, fuelling questions over whether HPE was overpaying. Those doubts are now harder to sustain as networking orders grow faster than reported revenue and AI-related demand builds in the backlog.
Neri repeatedly linked the networking performance to the AI build-out under way in large enterprises. As organisations deploy more AI infrastructure, he argued, they are spending heavily on the networking “plumbing” that connects servers, storage, accelerators and even entire data centres.
He also claimed HPE’s “self-driving network” pitch is turning into real deployments rather than slideware. One example he highlighted was the UK Ministry of Justice, where HPE says its self-driving networking technology cut network operations centre incidents by around 75 percent after rollout.
The AI story Neri told was not confined to networking or large training clusters. He said demand is expanding into more traditional enterprise infrastructure as customers roll out agentic AI and inference workloads.
HPE is also positioning itself as a case study for this shift. According to Neri, the company has developed roughly 1,200 internal AI use cases. CFO Marie Myers has implemented more than 52 of those herself, most of them described as agentic AI systems.
Internally, HPE is turning AI loose on its own supply chain challenges. Neri said teams have become “much more proficient” at matching scarce components to customer demand using AI tools. That matters because HPE has warned of supply constraints in areas such as memory and networking, suggesting that smarter allocation is becoming a competitive necessity.
On the demand side, Neri pushed back on concerns that customers might be front-loading purchases ahead of a slowdown. “We have not seen any pull in. We do not see a cliff,” he said, adding that “nobody wants to be left behind when it comes down to deploying AI.”
The strength of that demand has led HPE to accelerate its long-term financial ambitions. The company now expects to exceed targets previously set for fiscal 2028 by the end of fiscal 2026, something large enterprise vendors rarely attempt publicly.
Neri insisted the latest performance is not a one-off spike, saying HPE is “building durable momentum for the future” and that the current results “is not a one-time thing.” Whether that momentum holds will become clearer over the coming quarters, but for now HPE has what it lacked a year ago: numbers that make its Juniper networking bet substantially easier to defend.
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