Investors interested in stocks from the Computer - Integrated Systems sector have probably already heard of Hewlett Packard Enterprise (HPE) and Silicon Motion (SIMO). But which of these two stocks is more attractive to value investors?
Making their way onto the coveted Zacks Rank #1 (Strong Buy) list, several tech stocks are emerging as standouts in terms of their affordability and valuation.
The Zacks Earnings ESP is a great way to find potential earnings surprises. Why investors should take advantage now.
Investors interested in stocks from the Computer - Integrated Systems sector have probably already heard of Hewlett Packard Enterprise (HPE) and Silicon Motion (SIMO). But which of these two stocks is more attractive to value investors?
Here at Zacks, our focus is on the proven Zacks Rank system, which emphasizes earnings estimates and estimate revisions to find great stocks. Nevertheless, we are always paying attention to the latest value, growth, and momentum trends to underscore strong picks.
From a technical perspective, Hewlett Packard Enterprise (HPE) is looking like an interesting pick, as it just reached a key level of support. HPE recently overtook the 20-day moving average, and this suggests a short-term bullish trend.
The technology giant had accused the British mogul, who died last year when his yacht sank, of fraud in the sale of his company in 2011.
The company appoints longtime tech executive Robert M. Calderoni to the board as part of its agreement with activist investor Elliott.
Hewlett Packard Enterprise (HPE) reported earnings 30 days ago. What's next for the stock?
The U.S. Department of Justice has settled its lawsuit challenging server maker Hewlett Packard Enterprise's all-cash acquisition of Juniper Networks for $14 billion, according to court filings.
Spanish artificial intelligence company Multiverse Computing has raised €189 million in funding from Bullhound Capital, Hewlett Packard Enterprise (NYSE:HPE), Forgepoint Capital and Toshiba to advance its work on compressing large language models. The firm claims its technology can shrink the size of these models by as much as 95% while cutting computing costs by up to 80%, all without compromising performance.
HP Enterprise (HPE) and Nvidia (NVDA) announced plans to build a "Blue Lion supercomputer" which will use the A.I. giant's next-gen chips.