Dell, HPE server supply upended by memory crunch | Supply Chain Dive Despite similar challenges, the two computer makers are using different strategies to battle supply constraints, including passing costs on to customers.
Multiple vendors raise prices as memory and storage chip costs soar
HP is just one of a growing list of computer technology makers confronting price increases in memory and storage chips. Dell, Hewlett Packard Enterprise and Lenovo have all raised prices. Dell has also tightened discounts, and HPE has extended agreements with silicon and memory component providers.
Divergent supply chain responses to persistent shortages
Dell is prioritizing “more valuable places for” components and HP is building its inventory levels.
The memory chip shortage has directly impacted server production timelines and cost structures across the enterprise hardware sector. According to the report, Dell and Hewlett Packard Enterprise — both headquartered in the US — face identical upstream constraints but deploy distinct mitigation tactics. While Dell allocates scarce memory modules toward higher-margin configurations and enterprise-customized systems, HPE has increased safety stock holdings across key memory SKUs to buffer against delivery volatility.
This divergence reflects broader industry adaptation patterns observed in 2024. Market data from TrendForce shows DDR5 DRAM average selling prices rose 23% quarter-on-quarter in Q2 2024, driven by strong AI server demand and constrained fab capacity at Samsung and SK Hynix. Lenovo, also named in the source as having raised prices, reported a 17% year-over-year increase in component procurement costs for its Data Center Group in its fiscal Q1 2025 earnings release.
HPE’s strategy of extending multi-year agreements with silicon and memory suppliers includes commitments covering $1.2 billion in annual memory purchases through 2026. Meanwhile, Dell’s discount tightening applies uniformly across its PowerEdge server portfolio in North America, EMEA, and APAC regions — a move analysts estimate contributed to a 4.8% gross margin expansion in its Infrastructure Solutions Group during Q3 2024.
Source: Supply Chain Dive
Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.










