HP's $30 Target Hinges on Windows 10's End, Not AI Dreams

MarketDash Editorial Team
13 days ago
HP Inc. faces its Q4 earnings with analysts eyeing a $30 price target. The real catalyst isn't AI-powered PCs—it's the unglamorous reality of Windows 10's support ending and forcing corporate hardware upgrades.

HP Inc. (HPQ) reports fourth-quarter earnings Tuesday, and there's an interesting dynamic playing out around the $30 price level. That's where both optimists and pessimists seem to be drawing their line in the sand, though for very different reasons.

The Boring Catalyst That Actually Matters

Sure, HP management will tell you that AI PCs now represent over 25% of their shipment mix. That sounds exciting and futuristic. But the real story driving the bullish case has nothing to do with artificial intelligence and everything to do with forced obsolescence.

Microsoft ended Windows 10 support in October 2025. That's not a suggestion or a gentle nudge—it's a hard deadline that corporate IT departments can't ignore. And here's where it gets interesting.

HSBC upgraded HP to "Buy" with that $30 target, pointing out that roughly half of the installed base still hasn't upgraded. Even better for HP's business (worse for those companies' IT budgets): 20% of existing devices physically can't run Windows 11 even if they wanted to.

This creates what analysts are calling a "forced supercycle"—corporate buyers replacing hardware not because they're excited about new features, but because their old machines literally won't be supported anymore. It's the least sexy catalyst imaginable, but it might be exactly what drives HP to that $30 level everyone's watching.

HP's $30 Target Hinges on Windows 10's End, Not AI Dreams

MarketDash Editorial Team
13 days ago
HP Inc. faces its Q4 earnings with analysts eyeing a $30 price target. The real catalyst isn't AI-powered PCs—it's the unglamorous reality of Windows 10's support ending and forcing corporate hardware upgrades.

HP Inc. (HPQ) reports fourth-quarter earnings Tuesday, and there's an interesting dynamic playing out around the $30 price level. That's where both optimists and pessimists seem to be drawing their line in the sand, though for very different reasons.

The Boring Catalyst That Actually Matters

Sure, HP management will tell you that AI PCs now represent over 25% of their shipment mix. That sounds exciting and futuristic. But the real story driving the bullish case has nothing to do with artificial intelligence and everything to do with forced obsolescence.

Microsoft ended Windows 10 support in October 2025. That's not a suggestion or a gentle nudge—it's a hard deadline that corporate IT departments can't ignore. And here's where it gets interesting.

HSBC upgraded HP to "Buy" with that $30 target, pointing out that roughly half of the installed base still hasn't upgraded. Even better for HP's business (worse for those companies' IT budgets): 20% of existing devices physically can't run Windows 11 even if they wanted to.

This creates what analysts are calling a "forced supercycle"—corporate buyers replacing hardware not because they're excited about new features, but because their old machines literally won't be supported anymore. It's the least sexy catalyst imaginable, but it might be exactly what drives HP to that $30 level everyone's watching.