Hewlett Packard Enterprise Co. (HPE) shares traded higher Tuesday after the company unveiled a significant move in the AI infrastructure race. HPE announced it's among the first to offer Advanced Micro Devices Inc.'s (AMD) "Helios" AI rack-scale architecture, complete with an expandable Ethernet network that could reshape how cloud providers handle their most demanding workloads.
What's Actually New Here
This isn't just another server refresh. HPE is targeting cloud service providers who need to train and deploy truly massive AI models—the kind that require extraordinary computing power and bandwidth. The Helios system features built-in scale-up Ethernet networking powered by HPE's Juniper Networking equipment and Broadcom's (AVGO) Tomahawk 6 chip, all built on the open Ultra Accelerator Link over Ethernet standard.
The specs are impressive: each rack contains 72 AMD Instinct MI455X GPUs that deliver 260 terabytes per second of bandwidth and up to 2.9 AI exaflops of FP4 performance. Add in 31 terabytes of next-generation high-bandwidth memory and 1.4 petabytes per second of memory throughput, and you've got hardware designed specifically for today's most demanding AI applications.
Why This Matters
HPE president and CEO Antonio Neri framed the announcement as a continuation of the company's long partnership with AMD. "For more than a decade, HPE and AMD have pushed the boundaries of supercomputing, delivering multiple exascale-class systems and championing open standards that accelerate innovation," Neri said. "With the introduction of the new AMD 'Helios' and our purpose-built HPE scale-up networking solution, we are providing our cloud service provider customers with faster deployments, greater flexibility, and reduced risk in how they scale AI computing in their businesses."
The collaboration with Broadcom produced something notable: the first scale-up switch designed to work with AI workloads over standard Ethernet. By integrating HPE's AI-native automation tools with Broadcom's silicon, the companies claim they've made network operations more accessible while cutting deployment times and costs.
Stock Movement: Hewlett Packard Enterprise shares were up 0.23% at $22.01 at the time of publication Tuesday.