
HPE CFO Marie Myers said on the call that the company had already begun implementing DRAM-related price increases in November 2025, ahead of the formal amendment to the quoting terms. HPE has also shortened its quote commitment cycle and is actively steering customers toward lower-memory configurations where possible. “We are dynamically passing through memory and component cost inflation while protecting our margins and preserving profitability,” Myers said on the call.
A market already under severe strain
The revision did not come without warning. Server memory prices have been on a steep upward trajectory since mid-2025, driven by AI data centre demand absorbing memory supply away from conventional enterprise hardware. TrendForce projected in January 2026 that average DRAM prices would rise 50% to 55% in Q1 2026 compared to Q4 2025. Samsung, SK Hynix, and Micron have all redirected production capacity toward high-bandwidth memory for AI accelerators, leaving conventional enterprise memory undersupplied.
Gogia said HPE’s move should be understood as an early signal of a broader industry shift rather than an isolated vendor decision. “The pattern is beginning to appear across the broader infrastructure vendor ecosystem. Component volatility is no longer an internal vendor risk. It is a shared market condition that must be reflected in contract structures,” he said.
The implications for enterprise procurement
For CIOs and IT procurement teams, the ripple effects are already visible. IDC has previously warned that enterprise buyers whose budgets were set before the full scope of the memory shortage became clear are likely to face sticker shock when refresh quotes arrive. HPE’s revised terms make that risk explicit rather than incidental.
Gogia said procurement governance must now evolve to treat infrastructure purchasing as a risk management exercise. Enterprises will need mechanisms such as indexed pricing tied to component markets, defined price adjustment corridors that cap increases within agreed ranges, and staged purchasing structures that reduce exposure to a single delivery event, he said. “Organisations that fail to adapt will find themselves facing budget overruns, delayed infrastructure deployments, and difficult internal approval cycles when final invoices diverge from approved purchase orders,” Gogia said.
Networking less exposed
The repricing risk, however, does not apply equally across HPE’s entire product portfolio. Neri said on the call that HPE’s networking business, now significantly expanded following the completion of its $14 billion acquisition of Juniper Networks in July 2025, is “more insulated, with memory comprising a significantly smaller portion of the bill of materials.” Networking now represents nearly 30% of HPE’s total revenues and more than half of its total operating profits, Neri said on the call.
