NYSE • USD • TECHNOLOGY • COMPUTER HARDWARE
Current price is 31.5% of 52-week range
Overall score updated 19 days ago
Score confidence 100%
Overall Score
Score Breakdown
Momentum Signal
Last updated 23 days ago
HP’s moat is scale and distribution in PCs and printing, plus a large installed base that drives recurring supplies and services. The PC cycle is improving, with fiscal Q1 2026 revenue up 6.9% to $14.4B and Personal Systems revenue up 11% to $10.3B, reflecting commercial demand and “AI PC” positioning. Printing is the swing factor: demand and supplies volumes have been softer, limiting the durability of the rebound.
Profitability is stable but not expanding: fiscal Q1 2026 non-GAAP EPS was $0.81, while GAAP EPS was $0.58, implying meaningful adjustments. Management maintained FY2026 guidance of GAAP EPS $2.47–$2.77 and non-GAAP EPS $2.90–$3.20, but commentary points to cost headwinds (memory and trade-related costs) that can compress margins. Valuation appears optically low versus history and peers (third-party sources cite a mid-single-digit P/E), but coverage is limited and the “E” is sensitive to cycle and cost inflation.
Thesis: HPQ is a cash-return story with upside if the PC refresh cycle (Windows 11 and AI-capable devices) sustains into late 2026 while printing stabilizes. Key 12-month catalysts are follow-through in commercial PC units/mix, evidence that component cost inflation is easing, and clearer printing supplies volume trends. Key risks are renewed PC demand weakness, persistent input/trade costs forcing FY2026 results toward the low end, and ongoing print substitution/competition.
Recommendation: HOLD. The setup is attractive on valuation and improving PC demand, but near-term margin pressure and printing uncertainty make risk/reward more balanced over the next 12 months.