Hello, and thanks for joining us for our 2021 Dell Technologies Virtual Securities Analyst Meeting. Our press release, preliminary pro form a financials, web deck and additional materials are available on our Investor Relations website. During this event, unless we otherwise indicate, all references to financial measures refer to non GAAP financial measures, including pro form a measures, revenue, gross margin, operating expenses, operating income, net income, earnings per share, EBITDA, adjusted EBITDA and adjusted free cash flow. A reconciliation of these measures to their most directly comparable GAAP measures can be found in our web deck and other filings with the SEC. Additionally, I'd like to remind you that all statements made during this meeting that relate to future results and events are forward looking statements based on current expectations.
Actual results and events could differ materially from those projected due to a number of risks and uncertainties, which are discussed in our web deck and SEC filings. We assume no obligation to update our forward looking statements. Turning to the VMware transaction. We expect it to close in early November contingent on a favorable private letter ruling from the IRS. The PLR process and all other close related processes are on track.
Let me provide you with a few statements about the transaction mechanics. If you are a current holder of Dell Technologies common stock as of the record date, you will receive approximately 0.44 shares of VMware for each share of Dell that you hold, subject to the number of Dell shares then outstanding. In addition, Dell shareholders will continue to hold their Dell shares, which will then exclude any economic ownership in VMware. The implied value of the Dell shares based on closing prices on September 17, 2021 would be approximately $51 per share. Assuming Q2 FY 'twenty two trailing 12 month financials, this illustrative valuation implies an 8 times price to earnings multiple and a 6 times enterprise value to unlevered adjusted free cash flow multiple, both of which are meaningful discounts to peers and we believe represent an attractive opportunity for current and prospective shareholders.
We hope our agenda today gives you a sense of the opportunity we see for Dell and our shareholders. Today, you will hear short presentations from Michael and key members of our senior leadership team. We'll have a short break just before Tom's presentation, then the entire team will rejoin for interactive Q and A. With that, let me turn it over to Michael.
Hello and thanks for joining us. Today we're going to outline our future vision for Dell Technologies. But to talk about where we're going, we really need to start with where we've been and what we've built. Over the course of the last 37 years, Dell has been a disruptor and an innovator and we have fearlessly re imagined ourselves and our future again and again. We saw a better way to democratize the PC and then the data center and we built an incredible global business as well as a customer obsessed high performance culture that has thrived over decades.
The first wave of growth took us to over $60,000,000,000 in revenue. Later, when others questioned the future of personal computing, distributed servers and storage, we understood the power of our opportunity. And we made bold moves to capture it, taking the company private and committing to a multi year transformation. When the narrative changed again with the rise of the public cloud, we went big when others broke up and went small. Combining with EMC, the number one provider of data storage and VMware, the leader in software defined data center, we became the only end to end provider of technology solutions to customers of all sizes.
Today, with more than $100,000,000,000 in revenue and $12,800,000,000 in cash flow from operations over the last four quarters, I believe Dell Technologies is the most essential enterprise technology company on the planet. We are perfectly positioned as digital transformation and shifting customer needs continue to bring IT markets our way. Technology has never been more central to the world and we are at the center of the technology ecosystem as IT becomes more distributed, more hybrid and more multi cloud. We have structural advantages that are unique. We are unique in being end to end in our go to market reach, in our services capability, in our supply chain, in our scale and in our first and best alliance with VMware.
All of this translates to industry leading products and solutions. We win in the market, reinvest in our businesses and bring disruptive innovation to our customers. Today, you're going to get a little more color on our advantages and our innovation and also the enormous opportunities ahead in telecommunications at the edge and beyond. In a world awash with data where digital transformation is accelerating, we are at the center of our customers' IT agenda from the PC to the core to the cloud to the edge. And we're at the center of their personal lives through our industry leading PC experiences.
The markets in which we compete and overwhelmingly in which we lead are rocking and Dell Technologies is rocking. So with that position, why change? Why spin off VMware? Shareholder value?
Sure,
I've been very direct on capacity for Dell Technologies as we emerge investment grade? Absolutely. Broader shareholder capital return? For sure. And Tom will have a lot more to say about that in just a few minutes.
But this move is also strategic and designed to position us for what's ahead. The question I most often get about the spin off is not why, but what is Dell Technologies after the spin off of VMware? My answer, we are at the center of the multi cloud world. We are the enabler of what is clearly a multi cloud reality and future, connecting on premise infrastructure, applications and services. So customers consume data and instantiate cloud and software as a service any way they want, wherever they want.
That's why Fortune 100 customers like FedEx use Dell Technologies to move from legacy on premise data centers to colo and cloud, and to help them make the edge real by delivering data in real time, increasing productivity and more importantly delivering value to customers. Through our unique alliance with VMware, we create enormous value for customers in VMware environments, but we also have a vast open ecosystem bursting with innovation. The technical and commercial alliance we've perfected with VMware is a blueprint for what's possible given our position within the technology ecosystem. Today 30% of the revenues for the top 1,000 accounts in our Infrastructure Solutions Group come from software as a service companies, cloud hosting companies, telco, consumer webtech and fintech and that business is growing double digits. We have a bold long term growth agenda targeting $1,300,000,000,000 of addressable available market and $400,000,000,000 in future TAM opportunities.
Our core business is growing and thriving. And from there, we are building multiple multibillion dollar businesses in areas like Edge and Telco where our market position, unique capabilities
and go
to market reach let us do what others can't. So that's where we are and that's where we're headed. We're coming off several of the best quarters in our history. In our Q2 we grew 15% and set record revenues with more than $26,000,000,000 we grew our non GAAP EPS 17 percent to $2.24 a share. And over the past year, we've delivered a 63% increase and cash flow from operations.
I am incredibly proud of the value we create for our customers, our communities, our 150,000 team members and for our investors, including through the spin off of VMware. And it is right now, while we are at our strongest, that we must fearlessly reinvent again. What got us to this point won't win in the future. That's a truism in technology. Our history to date is a great story and you can read all about it in my upcoming book, but the most important and exciting chapter isn't in the book, it's the next chapter, the one we're writing right now.
Our interests are aligned across all of our stakeholders and with the core business currently trading at approximately 8 times trailing 12 months non GAAP diluted EPS, we see ample room for value creation going forward. Over 37 years, I have bet and re bet on this company and the power of technology to drive human progress. We have seen the opportunities and we have fearlessly pursued them and I see opportunity now and I'm committed to creating value for all of our shareholders in this exciting future ahead. Now let me turn it over to Jeff, Chuck and team and I'll be back shortly for Q and
A. Thanks, Michael. Realizing our vision requires 2 reinforcing strategic thrusts. 1st, consolidate and modernize the core business. This is our bread and butter, PCs, servers and storage.
We continue to lead in these large growing markets, and we have a proven track record of taking share, consolidating and reinforcing our position. But these leading positions didn't happen by accident. They come from our ability to listen to customers and adapt, grow and innovate to meet their needs. The world isn't running purely on premise or purely in the cloud. It's a spectrum and it's nuanced, and that's where we come in.
You'll hear today how Dell Technologies empowers our customers across their complete end to end digital needs. We provide a single, one stop, trusted shop to accelerate their business, data and IT decisions using best of breed technology. 2nd, build new growth businesses where we have a unique right to win. Michael said it well. We're writing the next chapter for Dell Technologies.
Our customers' businesses are becoming more complex and so is the data powering those businesses. That means the next big growth opportunities for Dell build off of our natural strengths, simplifying the complex in IT and digital decisions, assembling ecosystems that unleash the full innovation potential of the entire industry for our customers and building leading technology solutions to efficiently store, manage and generate business value from data. We've established a stable of solutions that allow customers to consistently operate their digital estate regardless of their cloud platform of choice or where it is located on premise, off premise and everything in between, and our 1st and best alliance with VMware as well as growing partnerships with all of the major cloud providers like Amazon's EKS Anywhere on Dell EMC VxRail or our Dell solution for Microsoft's Azure Stack HCI and Azure Arc position us to offer customers the choice and simplicity they need. These and other solutions will make Dell the center of and central to the multi cloud future. Able to win in this era of rapid technology transformation.
Sam Bird and Jeff Boudreaux will then go deeper on our business unit strategies underneath this corporate strategy. And Tom Sweet will share what this means financially, including our go forward capital allocation and return framework. So let's start with consolidating and modernizing our core.
Our core is the source of near term growth, profit and cash flow. Today, we are the world's essential IT foundation, enabling business outcomes, unlocking employee productivity and acting as the gateway to employee experience in the new world of distributed work. And we enjoy leadership positions in these markets as the graphic highlights we are the leader in external storage, data protection, mainstream servers, client revenue and displays. Not only do we have a leading share in these markets, we also have a track record of gaining share. And we plan to continue on this path.
These markets are stable and growing, and there's headroom for Dell to grow with them. Customers trust us to navigate their complex needs, a trust that has powered us to generate industry leading insights, predict trends and drive differentiated growth. So strategically, winning in the core keeps us at the center of customers' IT and digital agendas. It also creates a flywheel for us, driving more insights to fuel innovation and modernize our core businesses. This privileged trusted position with customers has led to a steady stream of market leading solutions.
Today, Dell is one of the most complete integrators of technology, which in turn enables better business outcomes for our customers. Simply put, we connect the dots that no one else can. Let me bring this advantage to life with more examples of how our innovation engine leverages our unique customer insights. Take DataIQ, which was born out of the need for customers to manage storage systems under a single pane of glass. It allows users to view all file and object data across the enterprise using high speed scan, indexing and search capabilities reports on data usage and identifies performance bottlenecks.
It's simple, intuitive and efficient what our customers demand. Another important customer driven innovation is Apex, a key to modernizing our core business. We recognize that growth in our markets will be increasingly generated from different consumption models, from a simple cloud operating model to as a service. And across all of this customers want simplicity, agility, control and efficiency. That's where Apex comes in.
Apex gives customers the ability to deploy and as a service model wherever it is needed in the core data centers, at the edge or in co location facilities. And it is increasingly how customers connect to our automated, software defined and AI enabled infrastructure. We are also co innovating with a leading automotive company on the future of manufacturing. We've teamed up with them to power their digital twin simulators for autonomous vehicles. To do this, we built a multi cloud approach in concert with NVIDIA and AWS allowing real time functions to compute on premise and lower priority functions to compute in the cloud.
It is this customer centric collaboration bringing the best of Dell as well as others' technologies that allow us to drive this incredible impact for customers. We have already discussed 2 of our most durable advantages, our deep relationships with a wide customer base and our unique alliance with VMware. But I like to call out 3 other unique and equally durable competitive advantages that matter. It's hard to overstate the importance of our direct engine to everything we do. We have technology's largest direct sales force and channel ecosystem, allowing us to build trust, deepen customer loyalty and generate insight.
Our direct engine enables us to cross sell, up sell and bring new solutions to our customers as markets evolve, creating higher levels of growth and higher levels of profitability. Our leadership positions across our end to end client and infrastructure portfolios result in an industry leading supply chain. While we have unmatched raw scale in the IT supply chain, what really distinguishes our market position is deep supplier collaboration and relationships that we've built over decades, coupled with our direct market insights and higher end mix. We are big, yes, but we are also good partners looking to shape mutually beneficial outcomes for our supply base, our scale and our relationships give us advantage costs, continuity of supply, better supply chain security and better sustainability. And you saw it.
Look what happened in Q2 with our supply chain. Even against a backdrop of unprecedented supply challenges, we delivered record PC shipments, record display shipments and posted 27% year over year growth in our CSG business. Dell Services is a unique in the industry service delivery network, not just boots on the ground, not just break fix, it's a modern automated capability that proactively predicts changes in customer environments and solves everyday problems. We have 79,000,000 plus connected devices globally, generating 22 plus terabytes of telemetry daily. Last year alone, we predicted and remediated over 4,000,000 issues.
These service capabilities cover the entire services lifecycle, including deployment, managed and consulting services and continue to drive differentiated value for our customers. As IT becomes more decentralized, this is a huge advantage. Where the public clouds are good at servicing hundreds of thousands of things in a handful of locations, we've built the capability to manage tens, hundreds, thousands of things in millions of locations across the globe. All of this is built on a foundation of a high performance culture honed over the last 37 years. We are customer obsessed and have a culture of continuous improvement.
Pleased but never satisfied is a common refrain in the halls of Dell. This cultural thread is sewn throughout the fabric of our company. It is the strong core business that gives us a springboard into related markets in the multi cloud world, creating new sources of growth.
That's right, Jeff. We are firm believers that pursuing new growth means following our core customer and leveraging the capabilities and advantages we've described today. We will not make speculative bets on markets where we do not have a right to win with customers. The good news is that the vast majority of new growth areas in the IT world are based on the foundations of our core business. There can be no AI and data revolution or smart manufacturing or healthcare or telecom transformation without a strong core of modern compute, storage and IT platforms.
Most critically, the same durable competitive advantages that let us win in the core are what allow us to disrupt adjacent markets and build new markets. Let us bring it to life with 2 examples, starting with the edge. Imagine taking 1,000 or millions of data points in a split second from shop floor equipment to make rapid adjustments to safety and quality or enabling remote hospitals to quickly diagnose and act on patient data to provide life saving care. Scenarios like these are real for across 108,000 unique sites today. That said, customers tell us that they see the potential at the edge, but struggle to unite the physical world and virtual world to drive business value, especially in challenging and constrained environments like oil refineries, retail stores and manufacturing floors.
Building this new bridge between the physical and digital worlds unlocks enormous edge market opportunity, estimated at $110,000,000,000 today, growing at 17% over the next 5 years and estimated to be a $700,000,000,000 market over the next decade. To win at the edge, you need more than just technology. You need the full suite of Dell Technologies capabilities. We have the supply chain to deliver at scale, the manufacturing to tie hardware, software and security into a complete offer and a modern global support capability to make it work remotely. These are enormous advantages.
Our ability to deliver both integrated hardware and software as we do with VxRail and provide services through remote telemetry matter. You cannot do complex integration across thousands of retail locations. You needed to work with low IT intervention. Further, our open compute approach and multi cloud approach are different. We have partnerships with leading vendors within the critical physical plant ecosystems across industries, think HVAC, manufacturing equipment and machine vision to name a few.
Together, we unite the physical world with the digital one. We can get any IoT stack or runtime to the right edge site securely, giving our customers choice. And we work closely with the cloud providers in their ecosystems where the solution best addresses our customers' needs. Telco is another great example of us being perfectly positioned for this moment in technology with the ability to leverage our core asset position, capabilities and open philosophy. Telecom is in the midst of a massive disruption.
As operators roll out their new 5 gs networks, they are looking to economize the cost of the core network. Taking a cue from other industries disrupted by software defined architectures, the operators are moving away from closed, high cost architectures. You may have heard terms like Open RAN used to describe these software innovations driving disruption. These innovations will lower the cost of wireless access and allow operators to shift that spend to new subscription and service offerings and move at cloud speed for the first time. As a result, the $114,000,000,000 TAM that was previously so highly guarded is now an opportunity for Dell, and we're ready to spearhead the disruption.
We are the largest provider of open software defined industry standard infrastructure and are now building systems for this market like our XR11 and XR12 edge servers, known for their durability against heat, shock and many other elements typical servers don't go up against. We have the engineering, supply chain and importantly, the services to anchor the emerging modern telecom ecosystem. And again, we're natural partners following customer preferences. Our strategy and business model allow us to partner across the vast 5 gs ecosystem. For example, we work with VMware and Red Hat, among others, on joint product development and customer and channel partner engagement.
Edge and telco are just 2 of the many opportunities we see given market trends, our position in technology and our durable competitive advantages. In fact, every year we find more opportunities to expand Dell's value in transforming the world into a high value digital future. We believe our open compute formula, multi cloud integration capabilities and commitment to customer choice will continue to power us to be the one stop shop for customers' digital transformations. And we see multiple ways to grow, particularly post spin off as we emerge investment grade and with meaningful investment capacity, organically as we're doing in our core businesses and with the exciting growth areas we've touched on today, through targeted M and A aligned to our strategic priorities and consistent with the capital allocation work that Tom will discuss and through technical and go to market alliances as we've done with VMware over the last 5 years and as we're doing at the Edge and in telco. We are first and foremost about customer choice and the spin off makes that clear and should unlock even more potential.
What we've described today is a repeatable model of growth inside and outside our core, one that we believe will drive GDP plus levels of growth and consistent EPS expansion.
So let's sum it up. It starts with consistently winning in our core business, where we build customer trust and create unique insights that power our innovation engine. It builds with our durable competitive advantages, broad customer reach, world class supply chain and a modern service delivery network. It extends beyond that core to win across all of our customers' digital needs, leveraging the same customer relationships, insights and durable set of competitive advantages that are central to our existing CSG and ISG businesses. And it is underpinned by a high say do ratio and a commitment to creating long term shareholder value.
We have reinvented ourselves many times and we have accumulated a set of unique competitive advantages that position us perfectly for this moment in time, for the next round and for the next round. With that, let us hand over to Jeff Boudreaux, who will describe our infrastructure business strategy, followed by Sam Bird on our client business strategy and then Tom Sweet on the financial and capital allocation implications.
Thanks, Jeff and Chuck. I'm excited to be here today to talk about ISG and how we're positioning ourselves for growth in fiscal 'twenty two and beyond. Our durable competitive advantages, including our comprehensive portfolio, world class go to market, supply chain, service and delivery capabilities and our financing arm of DFS give us a prime seat at the table when customers are making their most critical IT decisions, the ones that enable them to grow in a do from anywhere economy where their data is the most critical asset. And customers trust Dell more than any other partner to analyze, store, protect and manage their data. In fact, 95% of Fortune 100 Companies rely on Dell for their mission critical IT.
Data is expected to grow at 23% CAGR over the next 5 years as the world becomes increasingly more digital and connected. That growth requires better storage, better software and more compute. And we have the best solutions in technology in the industry and it's the gravity of that data where it's created, where it resides and where it needs to be processed that plays to our strengths. It's no longer just in the traditional data center or cloud. Increasingly data is distributed.
It's in co located data centers, it's at the edge, in manufacturing, in healthcare, smart connected cities, our homes, our cars. In fact more than 50% of new IT infrastructure will be deployed at the edge by 2023. With these major shifts multi cloud becomes vital to a successful IT strategy. So let's focus on cloud for a moment. It's a key driver of our ISG growth and we tap into that growth in several ways.
First, we provide the underlying infrastructure for many of the world's largest cloud service providers, including Software as a Service Providers, cloud hosting companies, telcos, web techs and FinTech. As Michael highlighted, this segment is 30% of our demand amongst our top 1,000 customers and grew double digits over the last 4 quarters. 2nd, we enable customers to build their own on prem private clouds and this demand continues to grow and we are the leader in this space. 3rd, we enable customers to bridge the on prem and public cloud world. Our data protection software enables us to protect data to and within the cloud.
PowerScale for Google Cloud allows customers to combine our best of breed storage software with Google's advanced AI and analytics. And our multi cloud storage services enable customers to keep their data in place simultaneously, connecting to multiple clouds without hyperscale or lock in. And now our Apex as a service offerings provide the best benefits that customers love about the public cloud with simplicity, agility and control. Our core ISG TAM is big and it's growing with headroom to expand into adjacent opportunities like Telco, Edge and as a Service. These growth areas will play a key role in ISG's long term success and position us for continued growth at a premium to the market.
In ISG, we're starting from a significant position of strength across our unmatched portfolio. No one else can offer customers the same breadth, depth and integration that we can. This provides more stable and predictable financial results and differentiated value relative to competitors who are more narrowly focused. Our ISG business has generated an impressive $34,000,000,000 of revenue and $4,000,000,000 of operating income per year on average over the last 3 fiscal years. And our ISG Financial performance has remained resilient in the face of the pandemic over the last 18 months.
In servers, we're number 1 in X86 server revenue and number 1 in mainstream server revenue with 28.3% share. And we are a proven structural share gainer over time. We have gained 560 basis points of mainstream server revenue share over the last 5 years and we've gained over 1500 basis points of share over our next largest competitor over that same time period. And our momentum accelerating Q2 with 3 10 basis points of mainstream revenue share gain year over year. In storage, we are far and away the number one player in every major category, high end, mid range, all flash arrays, CI, HCI, data protection, you name it, we're number 1.
In total, we hold 28.4% share in the external storage market, more than 2.5 times the nearest competitor and as organizations make critical investments to support their digital transformations, we're even more optimistic about our future prospects. We report our ISG business in 2 parts, storage and service and networking. I'll talk about each in more detail starting with storage. Over the last few years, we've made significant investments in storage and our portfolio in our go to market focused on driving consistent growth over time. We uniquely cover all critical areas of the storage market with our simplified power branded portfolio, all next generation modern architectures, cloud enabled and AI driven.
And yes, architectures matter and we provide the best solutions for each of our customer specific workloads and use cases. Simplification has enabled us to accelerate innovation both on our car portfolio and also on more long term R and D efforts. And our strategy is paying off. We've gained 3.40 basis points of share over the last 3 years in North America, the largest most technologically progressive market and typically a leading indicator of trends in other regions. In the high end price bands, we've gained 3.70 basis points of share over the last 3 years and we're driving the transition to the software defined data center taking 3.50 basis points of share in HCI over the last 3 years where we now have 32% of that market.
Critical to our continued success is our focus on mid range price bands, which represents roughly 60% of the total storage market. PowerStore, our key mid range solution is the industry's 1st modern mid range storage architecture in a decade and has now helped us to deliver 3 consecutive quarters of year over year growth in mid range, gaining roughly 200 basis points of mid and Q2 alone. Roughly 23% of Q2 PowerStore buyers are new to Dell Storage and a testament to the outcomes that PowerStore can deliver, 20% of PowerStore buyers were repeat customers. We're still in the early innings with PowerStore, but I'm excited to see its progress in the marketplace. Success in the mid range is imperative, but many customers are also looking at other modern storage architectures and we have the best software defined storage portfolio in the industry.
HCI is the fastest growing portion of the storage market. We're number 1 with VxRail, which has delivered consistent year over year growth since inception in 2016. It's a great example of innovation in our first and best strategic partnership with VMware. In PowerFlex, our software defined storage solution is the foundation of some of the largest on prem private cloud deployments in the world. Customers love its ability to scale compute and storage capacity independently, as well as its ability to linearly scale performance with additional nodes.
As the market continues to shift towards software defined deployments, you will see PowerFlex increasingly become the storage fabric for Dell's multi cloud software defined stack. And speaking of software, we are also the leader in multi cloud data protection. Our software protects more data in the cloud than any other company, including 7 exabytes across public cloud providers such as AWS, Azure and Google Cloud Platforms. Through constant innovation with partners like VMware, we are the leading provider of data protection appliances and software globally. And our 80% share of the purpose built backup appliances and market leading cyber recovery solutions make us the partner of choice for customers investing in ransomware protection.
Our robust portfolio refresh and innovation engine have built the foundation for us to renew storage growth over the coming quarters years. And we are in position to extend our leadership as the IT infrastructure market rebounds fall in the pandemic. Our overall storage demand returned to growth last quarter with our buyer base growing double digits year to date. We expect storage demand to grow again in the second half of the year and continue in fiscal 'twenty three as the economic environment improves, customers begin to reinvest in their digital transformation in their deferred projects. We build upon our mid range momentum and our Apex outcome service based adoption accelerates.
Moving forward, we're investing in new areas that will position us to win for years to come in storage, including Apex and Data Management. And you can expect to hear us talk more about data management in the near future. Let's shift to server and networking. Our server and overall ISG performance has remained resilient through the pandemic with minimal impact to profitability. With customers' confidence in the overall macro environment improving, server demand is growing again.
As I discussed earlier, data is growing exponentially. And we see a strong future demand environment for compute as customers seek to process, analyze and gain insights from that data. We grew Q4 last year and we grew our first half server and networking revenue 8% year over year with demand ahead of revenue. We also have a strong track record of server share gains over time and we remain well positioned to grow as the server market recovers through continued innovation. Our new 15 gs PowerEdge Servers have adaptive compute to handle any workloads from AI to data intensive and deliver real time insights wherever that data resides.
These service also delivered advanced automation with built in security and proactive resilience to protect against cyber attacks. We also recently launched a new set of servers optimized for telecom customers and specifically designed to perform in space constraint and harsh edge environments with extreme temperatures. And speaking of the Edge, it's not new to us. Chuck talked about our opportunities at the Edge. We already have a robust OEM business serving edge use cases today.
Our service play a critical role optimized for specific use cases in verticals like defense, healthcare, manufacturing. In fact, roughly 70% of U. S. Fortune 100 Companies use Dell Technologies for their Edge solutions today. And we are leaning into Edge further as we build an integrated Edge platform to meet the critical needs of specific entry verticals such as manufacturing, retail, telecom and smart cities.
Networking is a much smaller portion of our ISG business, but with our innovation and our competitive differentiation, it remains an important complement to our storage and service solutions ensuring they all stay connected. We are a leader in open networking with our Dell EMC PowerSwitch Data and Campus Solutions, industry leading software with Smart Fabric OS10 and Enterprise Sonic Distribution and the next generation access solutions in partnership with VMware. We expect service and networking to grow again in the second half of fiscal 'twenty two and into fiscal 'twenty three. Michael, Jeff and Chuck have highlighted several trends that paint a clear picture that the world of IT will be one that spans from edge to multi cloud. 92% of companies already leverage multi cloud and use an average of 5 clouds today.
The inherent complexity of the journey to multi cloud and the many difficult steps that customers must navigate to get there present a clear opportunity for us, not only in the core markets where we lead today, but in the adjacent opportunities that we've been discussing. Our fundamental goal is to help customers realize the multi cloud future. As Jeff and Chuck highlighted, our primary advantage is our deep customer relationships. We understand the fundamental pain points which really boil down to 5 key challenges inconsistent core operations across clouds, the lack of workload portability between clouds, the proliferation of data silos across the multi cloud, inconsistent security capabilities and no single point of support. We believe that our market position, open compute formula and durable competitive advantages make us uniquely positioned to enable consistent operations and seamless mobility of workloads from edge to multi cloud.
To enable customers to easily manage data across the multi cloud while protecting security of that critical data and to act as the service hub to support a customer's multi cloud implementation end to end. We are positioned to be the singular vendor at the center of customers' multi cloud future. We will share more about our multi cloud strategy and progress in the coming months, including at Dell Technologies Summit in October. The future is very bright for IHG. In closing, I'd like to reemphasize we expect growth in the second half of fiscal 'twenty two and for the full year in total and in fiscal 'twenty three.
Now I'd like to turn it over to Sam Bird to talk to you a bit about the amazing innovation and growth our CSG business continues to deliver.
As you've heard from us today, we have a lot to be excited about at Dell Technologies. We're in our 37th year of a consistent commitment to the PC. Our PC business has never been better and there is still ample room to grow and innovate. There are 4 key points I want you to take away from today's meeting. 1st, the PC industry has reset to a higher level, led by long term growth in the higher value segments of the industry, namely commercial PCs and premium consumer PCs, including gaming.
These segments are the spaces where we're focused. 2nd, these segments have grown reliably over the last 5 years. They have driven most of the industry revenue and profit growth and are expected to continue to do so. 3rd, Our client solutions business has delivered consistent, stable top line growth and differentiated profitability because we win with our unique direct sales motion. Finally, it's become clear that the PC is the essential tool for work, home and school.
Today's do anything from anywhere economy drives long term sustainable growth and has created even more surrounding opportunity in services and peripherals where we can leverage our strong attach motion across the broader PC ecosystem. Let's look at what's been happening in the PC industry. Worldwide shipments averaged approximately 260,000,000 units from 2016 to 2019 and jumped to over 300,000,000 units last year, with the highest growth in 10 years at 14%. As we look to the future, we continue to see significant opportunity. Shipments are projected to be even higher this year, growing 14% to 347,000,000 units.
And over the next 4 years, IDC projects an average of 350,000,000 units a year. But all PC units are not created equal, And they certainly don't provide the same level of financial return. The most valuable portions of the industry our commercial PCs and premium consumer PCs. These segments have grown reliably over the last few years, even before COVID related impacts. If you look at revenue, the value of these segments is even more clear.
The industry average ASP for these segments is approximately $1,000 compared to less than $500 for mainstream consumer PCs and Chrome. Fully 80% of industry revenue and nearly all industry revenue growth has and will come from commercial PCs and premium consumer PCs. While we opportunistically play in all segments, these higher value segments are where we are focused and our what matters for our long term growth. Commercial makes up more than 70% of our CSG revenue. It has delivered dependable and consistent growth throughout multiple cycles, and we believe there are secular trends that will continue to provide growth for years to come.
Businesses around the world are increasingly digitizing and using technology to increase productivity and innovate. We are witnessing the most significant aging of an installed base that we've seen. And customers need to upgrade to get the latest innovation and processing power to support the connectivity, collaboration capabilities and other data heavy uses in today's new digital environment. Work from anywhere trends have increased the number of places we need technology and driven a shift to notebooks with faster refresh cycles. Our research suggests in the order of a year and a half quicker replacement cycle, which will drive TAM expansion longer term.
Notebooks also tend to have higher ASPs and as customers switch from desktops to notebooks, they are inclined to maintain the performance of the device versus the price point. Add to that, the largest remaining consolidation opportunity in commercial is in small business and medium business, where we have continually invested in coverage and have a differentiated advantaged go to market model. Premium consumer PCs are a similar attractive stable opportunity driven by the rise of the middle class globally and the COVID strengthened role of the PC in bringing the world into the home. Our research suggests a shift in the home environment where we're now seeing more than 1 PC in a household and we expect that to continue to increase over the next couple of years as people want to stay connected, play games and have a better experience using their own PC. With our focus on these higher value segments, we've delivered consistent results in our CSG business.
Revenue has grown at a 7% CAGR from FY 2018 through to FY 2021. We have reached record commercial revenue for the last 3 fiscal years and are on track for another strong year. Our consumer business has also performed well, setting new revenue records in 3 of the last 4 fiscal years. We're number 1 in revenue And have demonstrated the ability to adapt to industry dynamics over time, as evidenced by our commercial PC share gains in 30 of the last 34 quarters and more than 700 basis points of share gain over that period. And it's not just top line growth and share gain.
We have also delivered significant margin expansion. In FY 2018 and FY 2019, our operating margin averaged 4.9%. In FY 2020 and FY 2021, it was 6.9% and we've set operating income records in each of our last two fiscal years. Our unique direct sales motion is a key driver of our consistent growth and strong profitability. Michael disrupted the PC industry by selling directly to customers more than 37 years ago.
And it is still an advantage for us today. So why is the direct model such a differentiator? Simple. It creates a powerful virtuous cycle. We have direct relationships with customers across the entire spectrum, from consumers to small and medium businesses, to the largest global enterprises spanning both public and private sectors.
This fosters intimate customer relationships. Through these relationships, ongoing services interactions and telemetry insights, we can better understand customers' needs and identify the right solution for them. This creates a better experience and more loyalty driving a premium solution mix, higher attach rates and continuing insights that fuel innovation and product design and go to market strategy. During the past 18 months, we've also completely revamped our approach in consumer, making a strategic decision to concentrate our efforts on direct via online and becoming much more selective in our retail partners. Dell invented the direct to consumer model with dell.com and is a leader in accelerating and e commerce driven world, which you've seen in our results over the last year and a half.
Based on our research of North American buying PCs, we found they spent over 30% more on direct PC attach compared to in store or other online site purchasers, which brings me to my final point. Our growth opportunity isn't just about PCs. While the PC is the centerpiece device for productivity and entertainment, There is a broader ecosystem around the PC that enables an even better user experience. Based on our analysis and industry data, we have identified more than $150,000,000,000 in growth adjacencies. Customers looking to create the best experience and improve productivity by more software and peripherals, whether it's keyboards, big displays to visualize data or collaboration accessories like headsets and webcams.
We have a proven peripherals attach motion, which has led to leadership in key categories, but we still have more room to grow. We are the number one provider of displays, a $32,000,000,000 category and the leader in the $5,000,000,000 docking category. We're investing to grow in other areas of peripherals like webcams, headsets and keyboards and mice. Combined, these are a $16,000,000,000 opportunity where we have a small share position today. Our industry leading services capabilities also provide a strong base for expansion.
Our global services organization is unmatched with more than 34,000 employees, 2,400 service centers, 7.50 parts depots and 105 repair centers. Our capabilities extend far beyond boots on the ground to modern automated telemetry and remediation built with the enterprise class expertise we have across Dell Technologies. We're using these capabilities to innovate and open a $40,000,000,000 adjacent opportunity across the PC lifecycle in areas like 0 touch deployment, no hassle endpoint management and device security, all of which will be available as a service for customers looking to transform the way they use technology. In conclusion, we are proud of a heritage of a strong operating performance and doing things in a differentiated way that produces better results. We're focused on the most attractive segments in the PC space, taking full advantage of our unique direct model and expanding to capture the large opportunity in services and peripherals that surround the PC.
We're doing this by getting some amazing products in the hands of our customers. Before we go to the break, I'd like to leave you with a video that showcases the innovation and design breakthroughs in our current portfolio.
Hi, everyone. Welcome back from the break. A few key points as we jump in. We do have a track record of consistent growth, profitability and shareholder value creation. We've demonstrated we can deliver results no matter what the market conditions, whether that is a market opportunities or headwinds.
We have the agility to adjust the model as needed and I will share how we're thinking about our long term financial framework and provide more detail around our evolving capital allocation post VMware spin. Stepping back to look at how we've executed against the long term framework we shared in our 2018 2019 analyst meetings, we've demonstrated a solid say do ratio. Our compounded annual growth rate of 7% is above our 4% to 6% long term guidance. We said we'd deliver operating income that grows faster than revenue would have 12% operating margins by fiscal year 'twenty three. We delivered an operating income growth rate of 12% compared to 7% revenue growth rate and we've increased our operating margin rate annually.
Our EPS has grown faster than operating income benefiting from lower interest payments. Our strong cash generation and focus on delevering have put us squarely in our core debt leverage targets and positioned us well to achieve investment grade across all three rating agencies. In fact, we recently received an upgrade from Fitch to investment grade and expect a farther upgrade after the VMware spend. And as a reminder, we have reduced our core debt by $25,000,000,000 since the EMC transaction. We have demonstrated that we can deliver record results while navigating through dynamic markets.
Our durable competitive advantages have been key. Our direct sales force provides the ability to pivot into market opportunities when they arise and gain share while doing so. In the second half of fiscal year 'eighteen and into fiscal year 'nineteen, we capitalized on a server refresh cycle. Our ASPs increased as we sold deeper into the data center with higher configuration levels. Over the past 4 orders that do anything from anywhere economy drove an early rise in consumer PCs, education notebooks and Chromebook sales.
Recently momentum has shifted to commercial PCs. The customer intimacy we have via our direct sales force highlighted this demand swing early enough for us to have our supply chain positioned for the transition to commercial PCs. As we have leaned into markets, we have driven a strong performance, gaining roughly 560 basis points of share in mainstream server and roughly 540 basis points of share in commercial PCs, excluding Chrome over the past 5 years. In early fiscal year 2021 when customers were looking for more flexibility to conserve liquidity, we introduced the DFS payment flexibility program as a way to help businesses through a challenging year. And as we highlighted earlier today, our modern services offerings provide a differentiated set of capabilities that drive higher margins across our portfolio.
The deep long term relationships we have with our supply chain facilitates continuity of supply in a constrained environment. This has allowed us to manage lead times for our customers and delivered record PC shipments over the last four quarters. Given the challenges we've seen in the macro environment over the past couple of years, the storage business has been fairly resilient and has grown in key areas. Over that time, the storage portfolio simplification has allowed us to focus on accelerating innovation, particularly in the mid range price band, the largest and fastest growing part of the market. Protecting profitability and liquidity during the unknown of the pandemic was a priority.
We took the cost actions we thought appropriate and reduced our operating expense materially. And if you look at our most recent quarter, our Q2 results were an excellent example of how we've leveraged our durable competitive advantages. Across our industry, we had differentiated results in our CSG business up 27% year over year and in our ISG business up 3% with servers up 6% year over year. We were able to shape demand selling configurations that were in stock. We navigated a complex supply environment, leveraging our long term relationships with suppliers to deliver our customer commitments and delivered 17% diluted non GAAP EPS growth.
In summary, our broad portfolio, durable competitive advantages and cost discipline provide us the levers to deliver results in any market. Earlier this week, we released an expanded set of ex VMware pro form a financials. The financial track record we talked about at the Dell Technologies level stems from how we've executed in our core businesses. By growing revenue at 6% with a 16% EPS growth between fiscal years 'nineteen through 'twenty one while delivering strong cash flow. These results reflect the durability of our business model.
Let's take a minute and focus on our long term framework. Our growth expectations are against our strong fiscal year 'twenty two performance. Given our broad portfolio, the innovation we're driving to modernize our core businesses and to deliver customer solutions leveraging our durable competitive advantages, we believe the business can deliver base case revenue growth of 3% to 4 percent over the long term. You heard Sam and Jeff discuss their focus areas that support a 2% to 3% long term growth in CSG and a 3% to 5% growth in ISG. In CSG, we're focused on the most stable and profitable segments of the market, commercial, small and medium business, premium consumer and gaming.
There's a large ecosystem in TAM around the PC, which our direct sales team is positioned to capture. And we have a consistent track record of strong relative performance. We have gained 5.40 basis points of share in commercial PCs excluding Chrome over the last 5 years. And our track record for servers is similar as we have gained roughly 560 basis points of mainstream server share over the last 5 years. Storage has already made significant strides in portfolio simplification with new solution releases in the modern storage architecture.
We're growing and gaining share in the fastest growing segments of the market. There are also opportunities to deliver higher growth rates, particularly in the adjacent markets and we'll continue to pursue and execute as our strategy evolves. We expect base case diluted non GAAP EPS growth over the long term of 6% or better. We will deliver growth and improved profitability via solution innovation and business mix and we will continue our disciplined cost management. Our supply chain excellence is a durable advantage that we will lean into and all of these along with our P and L scale allows us to drive EPS growth greater than revenue growth.
From a cash flow perspective, our revenue and OpInc growth, coupled with our disciplined working capital management, provides an advantage that yields cash flow growth that is faster than revenue. Given the growth we expect to see in the business compounded EPS growth in our cash conversion cycle, we expect our net income to adjusted free cash and also provides us with flexibility to invest in the business. As you know, we've been focused on deleveraging over the past several years. Our strong cash flow has enabled roughly $25,000,000,000 of core debt pay down since the EMC transaction. On a pro form a basis, our core businesses have generated roughly $6,000,000,000 of annual free cash flow since fiscal year 'eighteen.
Once we've achieved investment grade across all three rating agencies, which we expect around the VMware spin transaction, we will transition to a more balanced capital allocation strategy with return to shareholders as follows: First, we are committed to the investment grade rating and are targeting a 1.5x core leverage ratio. We will continue to fund organic growth opportunities and pursue targeted M and A aligned to our strategic priorities. Beyond that, we believe there is excess cash we can return to shareholders and are targeting to return 40% to 60% of adjusted free cash flow via share repurchase and a quarterly dividend. The Board of Directors has authorized a $5,000,000,000 share repurchase program, which will be used primarily to manage dilution of employee incentive plans and opportunistically to manage share count. This program will commence following completion of the VMware spin.
This program replaces the remaining amount of our previous $1,000,000,000 program. We also expect to initiate a quarterly dividend in Q1 of fiscal year 'twenty three with an attractive yield subject to approval by our Board at that time. Based on what we see today in the framework I've outlined, we are targeting a 1,000,000,000 dollar annual dividend to start. As is customary, we will provide more information on the record date and the amount of the quarterly dividend in Q1 following Board approval. As we wrap up today's discussion, let me leave you with a few thoughts.
Over the last several years, we've built a company that's positioned to be the center of the multi cloud world. During this time frame, growth, P and L leverage, EPS accretion and strong liquidity have been our focus. We've executed a number of actions that have unlocked shareholder value. We've simplified both our corporate and capital structure through the Class V transaction, selling non core assets, and we have been disciplined in our deleveraging. Our strategy to consolidate and modernize the core and build new growth businesses that enabled a multi cloud future coupled with our P and L leverage and strong cash flow drive our long term financial model where we expect to deliver 3% to 4% revenue growth, 6% growth or better in non GAAP diluted EPS, net income to free cash flow conversion of 100% or better and the capital allocation framework we announced today will provide incremental value to shareholders.
In closing, we have a track record of a consistent execution across any economic or IT spending cycle. We believe the technology trends we've seen accelerate over the last few years will continue to be strong in the longer term. Our durable competitive advantages and strategy position us well to provide solutions for our customers in a multi cloud world. With our execution, capital return to shareholders announced today and current valuation multiples, we believe there's ample value creation going forward for all stakeholders. Now let's open it up for Q and A.
We're now going to start the Q and A session. We've invited our sell side analysts to ask questions via live video. Then get back in the queue if you have additional questions. For others in our online audience, if you have a question, please submit it through the Ask a Question button in the upper right hand portion and the presentation of your screen. If we don't get to all of the questions, we'll get back to you directly after the meeting concludes.
Let's take our first question.
Our first question comes from Katy Huberty, Morgan Stanley.
Yes. Thank you. Great to see everybody. Appreciate all the details. This question, I think, is directed at Tom.
The market is clearly Digesting your outlook and the capital return plan positively today. But as I look at the particularly revenue And margin assumptions, there appears to be some conservatism and you're not really embedding share gains. One example of this I would point out is that on Slide 24, you show ISG market growth of 6% to 7% CAGR Versus your own internal assumptions of 3% to 5%. So given all the competitive advantages and new market opportunities, If you can just help us understand why there is a healthy dose of conservatism as it relates to approaching and the multiyear financial outlook? Thank you.
Hey, Katy, great question.
Look, I
think you got to step back and think about what we're trying to accomplish here, which is to give our investor base an understanding of how we're thinking about the business in future years. Obviously, it is a long term framework. And if we look at the goal of the opportunities, our durable competitive advantages, the long term market trends as we see them today, we do believe that what we've talked about is in fact the base case revenue growth of 3% to 4% makes sense. And then you have to think about the adjacencies and the other things that we can do to accelerate that revenue above the base case. As I highlighted in my presentation, if you look at say ISG for instance, which you called out, hey, we have a 3% to 5% base case.
Yes, markets are over the next number of years are headed that way or growing sort of low to mid single digits. In addition though, we also See there are also adjacencies that may offer or should offer interesting growth opportunities. Those aren't factored into our base case. So you should think about base case being as we continue to consolidate core market opportunities and then adjacencies above that. And look,
I think at the end
of the day, this is a long term framework. We know there's ebbs and flows in the cycles as we've all seen over the past 2 years. So I think the how we've framed it, I think is the appropriate way to think about it sort of over the intermediate term that
we highlighted.
Okay. And if I may just follow-up, maybe geared towards Michael around those adjacent opportunities that aren't embedded In the model, you have a really unique insight into Dell Venture Investments. What really excites you in terms of opportunities to either Partner or invest further in some of the investments that Dell has made through the venture angle over the last couple of
Yes, Katie. So I think we see a tremendous amount of innovation going on right now At the Edge and all the embedded intelligence that is going into machines and this machine to machine communication and all the new infrastructure that's going to be required there, as you said, through our Deltek Capital, we've invested in, I think, over 130 companies, giving us a window into sort of what's out there in the next 5 to 7 years. I would say that that edge is sort of the beginning of a whole new enormous opportunity that we see is going to create much, much larger amounts of data. 5 gs will just accelerate that whole process. And of course, you need all kinds of new compute engines for AI and processing in real time and as we described, all of that is built on our foundational business.
So and we've also had a great success in Deltek Capital in being a partner to many of those new emerging businesses.
Our next question comes from Amit Darianni from Evercore ISI.
Thanks a lot for taking my question and thanks a lot for the event. I guess maybe I want to go back to the capital allocation discussion a bit and Two parts of this I'd love to understand. 1, are buybacks going to be largely focused to offset dilution? Or is it going to be a more consistent net share reduction roadmap that we And then secondly, I'd love to understand where does M and A fit into the narrative for Dell as we go forward? What areas do you want to focus on?
And sort of what are the financial vectors we When we think about the deal potential there?
Hey, Amit, why don't I take the first part of that and then I'd ask maybe Michael, Jeff, Chuck to jump in as we chat about M and A. But as we think about buyback, right, so our whole thinking around shareholder return here is we wanted a balanced approach, right. So we wanted to put a dollar dividend out there and we've targeted $1,000,000,000 annually that we would begin next here and in addition to that, we also wanted a share repurchase program. We do know that we do need to manage dilution as you highlighted. I also would tell you that depending upon how the stock is trading and valuations, You should expect us to be in the market from time to time as we think about opportunities to reduce share count.
But obviously, that will be a balanced approach as we think about valuation and we can flex up or down depending upon where that is trending. So I think it gives us a lot of flexibility, which is what I think I which is what I wanted as we worked our way through this. On the other hand, I think it demonstrates to our shareholders We're committed to returning capital to them thoughtfully and appropriately, while also providing flexibility for the company to continue to invest. And I think that sort of dovetails nicely into the second part of your question around M and A. We have out we have we do we will have ample opportunity or ample funds to do what we would call targeted M and A.
And I think those are going to be aligned around our strategic areas of focus. And maybe I'd ask Michael to jump in or Jeff or Chuck to jump in and maybe add some thoughts about how we're thinking about M and A.
Yes. I mean, as Tom said, it's targeted M and A. I wouldn't be looking for any large scale transactions. And if you think about the strategic vectors that we've talked about, these new areas of growth, there are going to be opportunities for us to with some relatively small transactions and our incredible customer relationships, supply chain, distribution, etcetera, to create a lot of value. So that's how we're thinking about it.
Maybe a little texture with that is we've talked consistently about The strategy and what we refer to as the big six areas of technology that are really driving our roadmaps and really driving our interactions with customers. So think multi cloud, think telco, think 5 gs, think data management, artificial intelligence, machine learning and then lastly security. So that spectrum of technology, which we think has been accelerated through the pandemic and certainly what we see happening as companies rapidly digitize would be sort of those target zones or some texture around that very disciplined targeted M and A mindset that we will have.
Perfect. And if I could just follow-up really quickly. I heard Jeff talk about on the ISV side, we expect storage to grow back half of this year and for next year, is that just an expectation of what's the organic growth in the storage market is or you think the share gains are going to be happening over there? Just what's driving that growth in the back half share again versus organic would be really helpful.
Jeff, Boudreaux, you want to start?
Yes, I'll
take that. Yes, I'll take that, Jeff. I'm just coming off mute. So I apologize for that. Yes, just to clarify, so we are growing now Just for context here, again, the overall storage demand return to growth last quarter with Roche heavily in 2 key areas, which is around mid range and VCI, which are the big piece of the market where the growth is.
In addition to that, we actually saw double digit growth in our buyer base in both server and storage, which is a really good sign for us as we kind of think forward on forward momentum. So we do expect growth in the second half this year and into fiscal into the next year as we look forward. A lot of that's because of the focus of the mid range, right? If you think about the highlight of Jeff and Tom have talked this over and over again about the mid range is the imperative of where we have to win. It represents about 60% of the storage market.
We're extremely well positioned with the portfolio that I mentioned earlier with PowerStore and with VxRail and PowerFlex, which
are just new modern architectures that really help drive
if it's purpose built HCI or software defined. So depending on the use case and the market that customers try to derive, we can really lean into those. As you saw this quarter, we gained about 200 basis points a share in Q2 alone. It's our 3rd consecutive quarter of growth in the mid range for the biggest market, the biggest growth market. We have the best portfolio in that space.
We're very confident and our position in mid range.
Yes, maybe to build on that, Jeff, a little bit. Amit, so if you think about mid range, 60% of the marketplace, You've heard us talk in long preparation to bring out our PowerStore product, the new mid range product that Jeff talked about, 1st modern architecture in a decade in the marketplace and we now strung together 3 consecutive quarters of growth, 8% in Q4, 23% in Q1, 17% that we talked about in Q2. That is beginning to make a difference. Jeff talked about it. The 200 basis points of share gain he reference was in the mid range.
We grew twice the market in mid range in calendar Q2. So we are growing. We have a very broad portfolio, so there's places where that we're up and down, but broadly, we are growing. We are growing in the areas we think are most important, which is a modern 3 tier architecture, which is PowerStore and we're the market leader and growing in the modern most modern infrastructure, which is 2 tier architecture, which is the HCI space. So we feel very good about where the market is going and how it's modernizing as a rapid digitization occurs that we're in a good place.
We believe we can continue to grow.
Excellent. Hey, good to see you, Amit. Thanks, guys. Next question?
Shannon Cross from Cross Research.
Thank you very much. I guess my question is, and I don't know if this is Michael, Jeff or Chuck wants to take this, but you talked a bit less than maybe I was Based upon what we heard from Lenovo and we've obviously heard from HPE regarding as a service on your Apex offering. So how do we think about how you're positioning Apex? How we should think about any kind of markers along The way in terms of ARR, just I'm wondering because again, we certainly during Lenovo world, YY spoke
Chuck, you want to take that one?
Yes. No, thanks for the question. Let me start and Jeff did touch on this a bit in the comments, but let And how they want to consume our solutions. And so whether that's in a CapEx model or a financing model or whether they want to consume it on demand and that's where Apex Has given us the tool in the toolkit as the modern flexible consumption model that we're rolling out to customers. We've of course been offering various consumption models for years through our DFS entity and so this is not new to us.
But what Apex allows us to do is give customers a console and with a few clicks of a button decide what kind of outcome they want, what SLA 1 and then turn that over to us in terms of revising a managed service or managed data center utility type model. So when Jeff Talk today about we want to offer simplicity, agility, control, efficiency. That's what we're offering through our offerings, infrastructure services, Apex Cloud Services and our Apex Custom Solutions. So It's a very important part of the way customers as you know want to consume technology and we're committed to it. But we also acknowledge that there are customers that want to stay in the CapEx model, some that want to buy in a traditional financing structure and then in this more modern consumption model.
So we're trying to offer all of it.
Jeff? Maybe just a little more color there, Shannon, is we think about Apex as a service is really the modernization of our businesses. So Chuck talked about the modern consumption. It's Even in addition to that, it's continuous delivering integration of our offers, delivering our software is more delivering our offers more as software in a continuous manner. It's bringing a cloud based service model to our customers across the entire portfolio.
So when we think about Apex and giving our customers choice and really giving them the outcome nature they want with the choice of Apex rather than historically speeds and feeds and thinking about outcomes and putting that control in their hands. It is absolutely fundamental to what we're doing and it applies All of our businesses and we're pretty optimistic. If you think about markers, we've been pretty consistent. It's about customers. It's about customer acquisition.
Tom and I would tell you that it's not modeled into the financial performance that you just saw that he mentioned. And it really is about building market momentum and customer momentum and we like where we're going.
Hey, Shannon, maybe I'll add a couple of just a couple of comments on from the financial side. And Jeff is right, it is about customer acquisition this year and I've been pretty resolute in that I don't really want to talk about Apex until it gets up size where it makes sense where we're going to have a conversation around how do we think about impact to revenue, cash flow. I think that we're not there yet clearly. I would also call out that but we will provide you frameworks As we accelerate in this space and give you some idea of how we think this transitions at the appropriate time. The other thing I would just mention is, We do have a recurring performance obligation of roughly out of Cordele of roughly 35 $1,000,000,000 and I think that's up 30% year over year.
So our recurring revenue stability of cash flow, I think, reflects some of that RPO as well.
And just to cap all this off, I mean, we are very excited about Apex and seeing Some certainly interesting initial demand from customers there. And it's a dramatic kind of business model and TAM expansion opportunity for us. So we're quite focused on it. But we want to this is more of a medium to long term opportunity.
Great. Thank you. And then I had a couple of just PC related questions as follow-up. I don't know if Sam's on. He's not on my screen here.
But One is from a competitive perspective, and I'm not talking about HP or Lenovo here. I'm actually more interested. Microsoft announced Cloud PC, so I'm wondering how you think about that, how you think about Apple with the M1 chip and the M1X As they sort of roll out their offering. And then the second PC question is just how do we think about margins? Clearly, you've been running at a 7% to 8% margin.
How important is incremental attach and peripherals? And do you think that can continue? Thank you.
Yes. Shannon, on the competitor side, we like the lineup that we have. We've seen on the whether you talked about M1, Cloud based PC, you think about progressive web apps, there's a capability the thing that's unique in all these is this PC as a productivity tool for people at work has been, I would say, reinvigorated with the trends and the usage models that we've seen around COVID, we're very excited about the offerings that we put together. We're very excited about the future as we look at having compute power on a PC, Modern software applications and what we can put together that there will continue to be a reason for companies, individuals to invest, Buy PCs, refresh those PCs and do the things that they want to do in business or in personal life where they're looking to be entertained. We've got a great road map and lineup.
There are competitors out there in this space. We will continue to to battle with them and put out a lineup that our customers want. And when we do that, and we've invested in this space consistently for 37 years, when we do that, we've been able to be We think we'll continue to do that into the future. On your operating margin question, Like you said, we have seen an increase in operating margins. If you go back to 'eighteen, 'nineteen, we were more at 4.9%.
In 2020 2021, we were at 6.9%. We're certainly in segments and spaces of the industry where we see positive trends around margins. So you think about attach and the ecosystem people are building in new usage systems and the way they use devices today, That's helping operating margins, but there's also been unprecedented kind of cost declines. We've had Industry supply shortages for the past 3 years and those have helped out with ASPs. So we are now in an environment where we're Seeing some cost increases.
We're still seeing supply shortages. We think those things need to sort themselves out and get us in the model that Tom started talking about around how we see EPS growth and operating income targets that are more in the ranges that we've talked about as our long term targets. So we've seen some really good trends now. We'll have to see how those play out. They've been exacerbated.
Those margin trends have been helped by the way we do business, but we've also seen some industry environment that that will probably not always be there in the future. Jeff, I don't know if you'd add to that.
I would add one thing, Shannon. Whatever that range will be, what I think makes us different, in fact, more than I think I fundamentally believe, is our differentiated direct model. Our ability to reach customers and attach things, whether that is a dock, a display, a keyboard to sell Pro Support, Pro Support Plus, Pro manage, pro deploy. That is a differentiated opportunity or differentiated and sustainable advantage that we have in the marketplace. And then you take that and you focus it to where the growth is and to where the higher value units are, whether that's professional workstations, or our track record over a long period of time has demonstrated that we can drive differentiated revenue growth and profit growth against the competitive set here because of our fundamental differentiated model that Michael created many years ago that we continue to hone.
The opportunity that Sam and team are working on online and being able to extend that even further, it's just we're pretty optimistic. The fact that we can reach SB and MB directly, which is not through a channel. It's a very lucrative marketplace for us and we're able to target that customer base very precisely with our direct motions. It's an advantage.
Hey, thanks, Shannon. Thanks for the question. Let's go to the next one.
Our next question is from Jim Suva from Citi.
Thank you very much. I have a Strategic question for probably Michael and Jeff and then a financial question for Tom. The strategic question is, Michael, Your legacy of what you've done with Dell is so admirable, growing the company. And in the past, there's actually been some pretty large sized acquisitions you've done, whether it be EMC and others. But then recently, it seems like some of these have been kind of just unwinding, whether it be The tax free divestiture plan, the sale of Boomi, SecureWorks and Pivotal and stuff.
So, can you help us understand about the strategy of it used to be Dell all under 1 umbrella and end to end go to shop and now it seems like things are a little bit more fragmented maybe was just the market value. So help us understand that. And then the financial Probably for Tom is, how should we be thinking about free cash flow? Should that be kind of growing in line with EPS that you've given to be 6% or more?
Right, Jim. So look, I think we went through a pretty big transformation and had a rather complicated capital structure and there were a number of steps that kind of simplified that. What we also found was that the success that we had with VMware in that alliance was not really dependent on the ownership in VMware. It was more our ability to co create solutions and bring those to customers. And so what we've done is to formalize that in the form of a commercial agreement that has a long duration, very beneficial to all concerned to VMware, to Dell Technologies and to our joint customers.
And look, I think this is a blueprint for what we can do in the future. And clearly, there's also a lot of value created for shareholders as That stake in VMware, I think, wasn't appropriately valued on our balance sheet, hence the spin. Again, wouldn't hold your breath for any large transactions like that. And our M and A is going to be more targeted. And also, I think you'll see us continue to grow our alliances and partnerships.
Let's recognize that no company in the industry can do everything by themselves. And certainly, we've We're an attractive partner for others to continue to build our ecosystem.
Hey, Jim, on the I'm sorry, Jim. Hey, on your free cash flow, I did give you some frameworks Think about from a free cash flow, which is all around that net income conversion at 100% or better for adjusted free cash flow. So I think that's how you need to think about it. If you go back and look at history around that, you can see the trends there. You can see the last couple of years that have expanded.
So that's a good sort of yardstick that you should be thinking about as you think about free cash flow into the future.
Great. And thanks for all the great information. It was very insightful. Thank you.
And thanks, Jim, for 2 concise questions. Next question, please.
Next up is Aaron Rakers from Wells Fargo.
Yes, thanks. Hopefully, you can hear me okay. I got hopefully 2 concise questions as well related, Tom, to the capital return strategy and free cash flow. So first of all, Just as a point of clarification, when you talk about $5,000,000,000 of share repurchase authorization, given the ownership structure of Dell, Should I take that $5,000,000,000 is distinctly related to the Class C shares that are outstanding? Or is that more broadly across All of the shares outstanding in Dell.
And then the second question on free cash flow, I know you talked about in the prior question about free cash flow conversion to relative to net income. But these last couple of years, you've done $7,400,000,000 of free cash flow. It looks like DelCor net income last few years has gone around $4,000,000,000 let's call it. Do I think that the $4,000,000,000 Or maybe $4,000,000,000 to $5,000,000,000 of right free cash flow range or do you think free cash flow continues to punch well above that net income on Ford Del?
Thank you.
Yes. Hey, Aaron, on your first part of that question around share buyback, we are We have been framing that around Class C.
And so
that's how we're thinking about it. We do remember though that both Michael, who owns Class A and Silverlake, who owns Class B, if they were to decide to trade at any point in time, those But it is targeted at Class C to be as transparent as I can be. On the free cash flow, Look, I mean, I think about it like this, which is, yes, you're right. We have expanded free cash flow Pretty dramatically over the last year or 2 given the strength of the business. I think historically as you look at adjusted free cash flow And so the slides that I laid out has been averaging around 5, 5%, 5% plus in that range.
So I think you ought to think about it like that with the opportunity to expand as net income expands. And so again, I'm going to point you back to that conversion ratio, which is how I think you ought to be thinking about it. And obviously, our intent is to drive that conversion ratio of 100, but I think 100 is a good long term benchmark to be thinking about.
Very, very helpful. Thank you for all the details.
All right. Hey, thanks, Aaron. I'm going to inject a question from our online audience real quickly here. I believe I'll point this one towards Jeff Boudreaux. Hey, Jeff, given your leading share in services and storage, would there be synergies for increasing your presence in networking?
So networking is a much smaller portion of our ISG business, which I mentioned earlier today. We're really focused on the innovation and the competitive differentiation. And it's really an important complement to what we do around storage and service solutions really to ensure that they all stay connected. That's the key thing for us. And the areas that we're leaning in for more opportunity is around the open networking portfolio itself.
So we have some solutions around the power our Dell EMC PowerSwitch data center and campus solutions. But the big areas that we've really leaned to is around software, software around SmartFabric OS 10 and Enterprise Sonic Distribution. So these are some of the areas that we look forward to, but we see it as a big complement to what we're doing to the broader portfolio and really driving that portfolio. All right.
Great. Hey, thanks, Jeff. All right, let's go to the question from our sell side analyst audience.
Next up is David Vaught from UBS.
Great, guys. Thanks for doing this. This has been incredibly helpful. Maybe this is a question for Jeff and Chuck.
And when you look at
the expansion of the TAM, specifically on the edge and the telecom markets, can you give us a little bit more detail on what the criteria are you might be looking at, Given that these markets typically have inherently different growth profiles, margin structures, as well as incumbents that clearly have different margin structures as well. And along those lines, should we expect you to target opportunities in structurally faster growth and better margins than your core ISG business today? And then I have a follow-up.
Jeff, you want to start and I'll layer on?
Sure. Let's pick on edge in the telecom sector. I mean, I think we step back and we look at what's happening at the edge and maybe some data that will help kind of put it together. You look back 2020 as we entered this decade, most of the data in the planet was created in data centers. By 2025, most of the data that's
It's going to be created as outside of
data centers in public cloud. Where is that going to be created? It's generated on the edge. Growth in applications to take advantage of that data is growing exponentially on the edge. We believe the edge is really the 3rd premise.
And if you talk we consistently talked about multi cloud. So public cloud, on prem cloud, edge clouds. The opportunity we have is to obviously connect those because what customers really want is the ability to use the different capabilities across multiple clouds. So there's an opportunity for us to link multi cloud, take advantage of this explosion of distributed and it really is distributed computing and distributed storage at the edge. Kind of plays to our game.
That's what we do. We put lots of stuff in lots of locations. So the notion of smart cities, smart minds, smart oil platform, Smart hospital, smart factory, as the world rapidly digitizes and that data grows exponentially and is generated outside the data center, we think a distributed architecture is the answer. And we think the attributes of that distributed architecture are around latency, I. E, low latency, Because you want a deterministic response to be able to process real time.
We think that distributed architecture has to be massively scaled, which will drive higher levels of automation, which is what we're putting in our portfolio, higher levels of intelligence. And then lastly, we think there's this element of data gravity. Jeff Boudreaux could probably tell a whole lot more about this than I can, but the notion of where data is created, that's where you want to process and that's where you want it stored. It's very complicated to move and very expensive to move. So when you think about that as a category, that's a very target rich environment And then if you think about what customers are struggling with today, they struggle with 3 primary things.
It's overly verticalized, highly fragmented and over siloed. They want somebody like us to come in and bring a turnkey solution to link their digital world with their physical world, their internal physical organizations, the physical factories, and we think with our service portfolio, Our reach scale of supply chain and the things we build are right for the
and specifically, it's early we categorize it today still early in the full build out of what we're going to see on the edge. But I think highlighting and picking up on what Jeff said about when we combine some of our competitive advantages, right, tying our hardware and software and security as we do in a VxRail and importantly the services layer that Jeff said, which is very important to successful edge deployments. We find the margins to be very, very attractive. So again early days and won't dimensionalize margins in the space. It's an evolving structure, but those are the recipes To both grow and deliver margins consistent with the
In simple terms, high performance compute and lots of storage drive margins up.
Yes. Now if
you think it's Maybe just as a quick follow-up along those lines. I mean, when you think about the targeted M and A in those verticals or any sort of adjacencies. Obviously, I don't want to get into the margin discussion as you just mentioned. But do these targeted transactions need to be financially accretive to EPS or free cash flow And should we expect them to be a little bit more software rich with a recurring component to drive sort of that higher, more sustainable revenue growth
I don't think there's going to be a blanket recipe there. I think there'll be opportunities where we'll acquire IP. That IP is increasingly more softer nature in all of these areas that we've The big six that we refer to internally. It really is about software and being able to drive more value up the stack in our business, which is what we've been doing. And that continued progression, I think, is really right for the offering, When you look at multi cloud, edge, 5 gs, what we think will happen on the AI side.
So they're pretty exciting categories. Can I see some of those as give IP tuck ins and capabilities? Sure. Larger, will Tom want some EBITDA with it? I'm certain that will be some of the discussions that we have.
And again, I don't think there's a one broad brush that we can paint that with.
Yes, I would just reiterate, I think what we said in the last question on M and A, which is the words you should think of are strategic And targeted and disciplined, so strategic and that we are trying to fit this into the M and A M and A into the strategy framework we discussed today. We don't you shouldn't expect on where we're looking. A targeted meaning we are augmenting our innovation agenda That is the goal here. And so as Michael said, you shouldn't expect large scale transformational transactions. That's not how we're thinking about at this point.
And discipline were laser focused on value accretive transactions to long term shareholders. That's the objective.
Thank you.
I was just maybe one more thing, Rob. If you look at the other category that we talked about this morning, telecom, The very similar thing, it's going open, modular, standardized, virtualization is occurring, containerization is happening, disaggregation of the network. As it disaggregates, it wants to be more cloud like. As it becomes more cloud like, we've now talked about software, and it begins now to be very ripe for the opportunity here. The RAN in particular, which has been proprietary, is really being disaggregated.
It's very much being opened up. It's becoming more API based, built on standardized hardware. That's what we do. So a market that has not been open to us for a very, very long time, highly proprietary, is moving rapidly to becoming open, is virtualized and standardized. That's a recipe that we know quite well and that we think our durable set of advantages that we talked about apply to this marketplace.
All right. Hey, great. Hey, thanks, David. Thanks, team. I'm going to make a slight modification to our instructions just to allow as many analysts Possible to ask a question in the limited amount of time that we have left.
Just ask as we move forward, just if the analyst will just limit it to one question, it will let us get through a few more people. So
Next is Matt Cabral from Credit Suisse.
Thanks for having me on. And I guess, Rob, I'll stick to just one question then. I guess some of this is going to build on, Jeff, an You just gave around multi cloud. I'm wondering if you could expand a little bit more and just talk about some examples of the multi cloud portfolio you guys have today. And As we think about more workloads moving to the public cloud over time, just curious how much of that can be consumed independent from the underlying infrastructure that has on prem.
And then kind of just one last final piece. As we think about the multi cloud strategy going forward, I guess I'm curious how much of that is dependent on the partnership you guys are going to continue to have in place with VMware versus IP or just other offerings that sit within the core Dell portfolio itself?
Sure. Let me link some strategy at the And then maybe I can bring in Jeff a little bit. We can talk about some of the current offers. But I think we referenced earlier this morning, 92% of customers are using multiple cloud, 5 different clouds, etcetera. To me that while interesting, the more interesting part of that is not how many clouds people have.
It's where the future of data processing, the future of artificial intelligence, the future of digital transformation architectures are going. And what I mean by that is customers increasingly are going to want to access the capabilities of many clouds. And to think that there's going to be 1 cloud or the clouds are going to be siloed, that's not what customers want. So part of our strategy is really about linking the data in those clouds to make it easier for customers to use the best of what may use in a public cloud, what may be the best of the capability they've built in for maybe security reasons and then on prem cloud and then being able to reach what I've just talked about earlier in the edge and Edge Clouds, the real time data processing to drive better outcomes. So we think the world moves towards How do we collectively enable our customers to take advantage of all the capabilities in the cloud?
That's If I would call the baseline strategy of what we're trying to accomplish, that's it. Then if you think about what we're doing and where Jeff has spent a lot of time on the Storage side, whether that's our file system for unstructured data that we put into the Google public cloud is an example. The most recent example of what we just launched with AWS and their containerization technology, the work that we've done with our data protection assets that Jeff mentioned earlier, you're seeing us making our products very cloud friendly to help our customers be able to take care or to be able to serve their data needs and being able to move data in the future, which we think data management and data mobility, the assets that Jeff has, are key to being able to be at the center point of this multi cloud, if you will, is an inflection point read. Jeff, anything you would add on the current assets? I know you can enumerate far greater than that.
Yes. No,
I mean, you nailed it. I mean, the big ones for us are around data section, which we you just talked about highlighted and what we're doing in all the public clouds here. I know the big one is around the file and the file use cases specifically and we Obviously, the Google Cloud Platform and working with all the cloud vendors in that space as well. But to your point, I guess, the big thing customers are looking for is a lot of pain If you think of the multi cloud world and data being distributed, data being everywhere, and a lot of these clouds don't talk to each other and they all have different tool sets. They're looking for someone to help navigate all that complexity.
And that's where we come in. We come in and help them simplify that. So it's simplify management. It's simplifying the operations. It's around seamless mobility of those workloads.
So They can use the right you have that critical asset, that data using the right tools at the right time and in the right location. So that's what we're going to focus a lot for. It's around Operations and Management Simplicity is going to be around data mobility and it's going to be around data security. So regardless if it's at rest or in flight, we want to make sure that that's secure for our customers.
Great. Well, I was just trying to keep moving here. Is that okay, Jeff? Or do you want I didn't mean to cut you off.
It's just fine.
Okay, great.
I zip it. All right,
Matt. Thanks. We'll go to the next question.
Next is Simon Leopold from Raymond James.
Thanks a lot. I wanted to see if we could talk a little bit more about the storage segment. In that last quarter, high end sales were weak. So even PowerStore, HCI, they couldn't drive better overall growth. So I wonder if you could drill down on the trends there.
What are the influencing factors and things I'm thinking about include mid range moving up market, potentially share loss at the high end and public cloud adoption. And I want to sneak in a question on behalf of investors that have been asked that I imagine has no answer. So don't count it as the second question. But how is Michael commenting on the idea that he might take the company private at some point? Thanks a lot.
Mike, you would add on that one.
Yes. Well, let me take the first one. So No plans to do that. I think if you go back 9 plus years now, very different set of circumstances that led to the company going private transformed the company and don't have any plans to go private again. So there you go.
And look, I think we've created a structure here that is is beneficial to all shareholders. And as we've laid out the value creation framework here, I think there's a great opportunity for everyone here.
And on the high end, let me just add a quick I'll take the high end real quick unless Rob yells at But context wise, it's as you're aware, we're the clear leader in this space in high end storage. We have over 40% share, Right. And we're more than 4x the nearest competitor in this space. But also the Highland is cyclical and it tends to be correlated on the mainframe refreshing cycle. So think about that a little bit of context.
We regardless of what the market is doing, our target is to grow at premiums of the market, which Tom and Jeff highlighted earlier, and that's still the case regardless of that. And that allows us to extend our leadership in that specific segment or market that we're participating in. But if I step back to the macro, I guess, storage market, the external market is $26,000,000,000 We have over 28% share, as I said before. So we're in good position specifically in HCI and in high end, like I said, over 42% share of the high end market. Our opportunity goes back to the mid range, as I said 60% of the market, it's the highest growth segment, it's where our focus is, it's where we can get consolidations, where we can drive more share, And that's really the goal and the focus of the team.
So yes, some of the use cases that you mentioned are, I guess, blurring the lines between high and a mid range depending if purpose built 3 tiered architectures, 2 tier HCI or software defined assets. The good news is we're unmatched portfolio in all those. And again, we grew 3 consecutive quarters in the mid range, where our next 4 competitors all declined in the mid range this last quarter. So feeling pretty good about that. But Jeff, do you want to add anything?
We have a very large portfolio from high end to data protection to entry to mid range to unstructured. Were the leader in all those categories. There are more headwinds today, as Jeff mentioned, in the high end. And with a 40 percent share position in a cyclical business, that was a headwind. Where we know our long term growth is, is in 60% of the market.
In 60% of the market, we grew 2 times the market growth rate. We took more share than anybody. It's the 3rd consecutive quarter in mid range that we have grown, as Jeff just mentioned, we're optimistic, but it's a big broad portfolio and not all grow at the same time and that's certainly a challenge that we are trying to articulate, clearly want to grow all of them, but there are some secular headwinds that just make that more difficult than not.
Next is Wamsi Mohan from Bank of America.
Yes, thank you so much. Michael, you opened the call with the evolution of Dell and the need to reinvent in the future. As you spin out VMware, what metrics Are you going to look at to judge the success of this next leg of the company? And at a high level, would you agree that the business will be more Cyclical post VMware spin and how you think about managing the cyclicality of the business and the volatility associated with the margin structure? Thank you.
Well, as you've heard, we think we have significant opportunities and you'll see us continue to stay focused on free cash flow growth and growing the earnings and cash flow of the company, not only through the share consolidation, but these new opportunities. And look, I think we have when you look back at longer periods of time, we've done a pretty nice job growing share even during periods where the market wasn't so strong. And the I think one other big focus is on ensuring that both VMware and Dell Technologies continue to do well. I think the alliance a partnership that we've had, when the discussion earlier about multi cloud, let's not forget that VMware has an incredible position in multi cloud and continues to build that out. And Dell Technologies has effectively created the not only first and best, but effectively the easy button for large corporations, corporations of all sizes to deploy that consistent infrastructure, consistent operations, expressing The software value inside the public clouds, solutions like VxRail, which are industry leading and beyond, and all that will continue.
So I think we have great growth opportunities. I think we'll continue to generates significant free cash flow and create a lot of value for our investors.
Hey, Michael, maybe let me
Just comment, hey, Wamsi. Look, I think as you think about the business ex VMware, If you look at the pro formas we released, it's a pretty stable business, stable to growing, generating strong cash flow. We're broad. We cover a lot of markets in all of the geos across the globe. We're not immune to economic cycles per se, but I think we've demonstrated the ability to navigate economic cycles pretty successfully.
And we'll pull the levers that we need to pull in order to adjust model appropriately to stay true to our longer term framework that we're chatting about today. From a metric perspective, I think there's 5 fundamentals you got to look at. We are going to look at revenue growth. We're going to look at EPS growth. We're going to look at free cash flow growth.
We're going to look at share capture over time. And we'll have various productivity metrics as we look across our various businesses to understand the efficiency of the assets we're deploying and how our resources are being used. And so Look, I mean, it's our job to manage this in a way that drives shareholder value, and that's what we're going to be focused on.
Great. Thanks, Wamsi. Good to see you. Next question.
Next question is from Krish Sankar from Cowen.
Hi, thanks for taking my question and all the great information you folks provided. I just want to appreciate how you spoke about the PowerStore that refresh is still building momentum. This kind of cues the impact of the overall PowerMax and Powerwall system or the incremental refresh in the VxRail, HCI, the software When you look long term, would these major efficiencies drive the growth? Or do you think software and assets elements like Apex
Jeff, you got that one?
I can take it. Yes. So I guess and first is, I guess, the Go back after the portfolio that we talked about before, architecture does matter in regards to how our customers are deploying. So if you think about the workload, The use cases, what they're trying the SLA they're trying to derive, if it's CapEx or OpEx, we're going to be hit for them and support them. We're going to have unmatched offers in those spaces.
Over time, as we've already seen, things are going to shift in regard to where it's located, on prem, off prem and also the underlying architecture. The good news is regardless if it's hardware or software that all I mean, if it's software, it still has to reside on something. It has to reside on hardware. And that's one of the key things that we have for our advantage, which is we have we've built integrated systems regardless if it's a physical layer, and abstraction layer and an advanced services layer, we have the architecture where Jeff was sitting on before. And if you think about where the world's going around data, data being distributed, The architecture, the distributed architecture to support that, that plays right to our hand and a lot of that is going to be software as we lean into that as we go forward.
The good news is if you build the software, right, so think of what we do with PowerStore, it's software based, it's microservices based, it's container based, that is accessible to other use cases. So if it's a physical thing or in a virtual thing, we can deploy that wherever it need be depending on what the customer is trying to drive. So is there going to be a shift from physical to software? The answer is yes, and you'll see you already see that today going from 3 tier to 2 tier, we're embracing that and we're driving that as we go forward.
Awesome. Thanks, Krish. All right, next question.
Next up is Tony Sacconaghi from Bernstein.
Yes, thank you. You commented initially, I think it was on your first slide that was trading at 8 times trailing EPS, which would imply trailing 4 quarter earnings for about 6 point $0.30, dollars 6.25 I think the market post Dell spin will be looking at what Dell is trading on forward earnings. And so I'm wondering if you can share your perspective on whether fiscal 'twenty three earnings will be above, in line or below that roughly $6.30 in trailing 4 quarter earnings. You did kind of selectively talk about ISG growing in 2023. You didn't mention that PCs were going to grow in 2023.
So should we be assuming that PCs will not be growing in 'twenty three and ISG will and you'll likely be under your target growth rate in 'twenty three and how should we think about Qualitatively at least EPS. And then the final part of that, which I think is important to EPS is you're going to have $13,000,000,000 in gross cash post the Boomi completion. I think, Tom, in the past, you've talked about having We're needing only $4,000,000,000 or $5,000,000,000 to run the business. That extra $8,000,000,000 is potentially costly. You could buy back a lot of shares with that or you could pay down debt and capitalize on the spread between what you're paying in debt versus what you're earning on the cash.
And that obviously would impact earnings over the next year or 2. So maybe you can help us with some of those details. Thank you.
Hey, Tony. I'll try and unpack that question for you. So let me start with the purpose of today's call is not to provides fiscal year 'twenty three guidance. And so the purpose of today was just to give you some thinking and some framework around how do we think about the company over the longer term. Having said that, we do think the PC environment is healthy next year.
So our expectation as of right now is growth. But again, I will provide FY 'twenty three guidance as we get closer to the end of the year in our Q4 earnings call. So stay tuned for that. On your cash comment, we should probably take that offline at some point. I think you're a little I on your cash comment, and I won't walk cash for you right now, but you got to think through, yes, to end the year with a healthy cash balance.
Part of that is around ensuring that we have flexibility to continue to invest in the business, continue to look at optional debt repayment if that's we so choose to do so, look at potential optional share repurchase. So we like the flexibility and we'll outline more of our framework as we get closer to the end of the year.
Can you just confirm you only need $4,000,000,000 or $5,000,000,000 to run the company in gross cash? Is that the right number we should be thinking about?
Tony, you've said it before.
Tony, you and I have both talked about over the years that roughly $5 ish billion to prove to keep from a company perspective to run sort of the day to day of the company. Yes, that's correct.
All right.
Thank you.
Thanks, Tony. Appreciate the question. All right, next question please.
Sidney Ho from Deutsche Bank.
Thanks for the presentations. I want to go back To the Apex offering a little bit, I'm hoping that you can double click on that bucket a little more. Obviously, it's so early days and I know you're not ready to talk about the financial impacts. Based on the engagement so far, can you give us a sense what portion from new customers versus existing Dell customers? How much is net incremental and how do you expect that profile to change over time?
And more importantly, what do you see as the key differentiators of your Apex portfolio obviously is still expanding for some of your peers. Thanks.
I'll start and probably get some help along the journey here. Look, our offers today are, I think, limited in the sense that we don't have the Our portfolio, which is the direction we're going. But we like the portfolio that we have today, particularly around the cloud and the custom orientation that we have today, which is what customers are gravitating towards initially. Some of that is based on the history that Chuck, I believe referenced earlier, we've been in this business a long time. We've had a number of custom solution capabilities for a long time.
What we've done is be able to do it at scale. We've simplified it by building a cloud native control plane, Making a few clicks and the next thing you know 14 days later your capability is delivered. Done in storage, Jeff and the team have done a really good job on our Apex Storage Services and we're seeing momentum there. In terms of our customer base, you would expect it would be both an acquisition vehicle because we haven't had that at scale for some customers, now we do. And you would expect us to sell it into existing customers.
We've seen this adopted by midsized companies to large corporations, to public institutions, to large global enterprises. So we're excited about the early momentum. Again, our momentum here is about what we call logos using the capability, so acquiring new customers. That's what we'll continue to focus on. We believe one of our differentiations over our competitors, it's literally one pane of glass, We're focusing on helping our customers with the agility, simplicity and control they want.
We believe we're offering that. We believe what another differentiation we have is how we price it. It's one price from us. No surprises. Chuck, Jeff, anything I missed you guys wanted to?
No, perfectly so.
All right. Appreciate it. We're going to have time for a couple more questions. We want to Stay true to our commitment to keep this meeting concise. So two more questions from our audience and then we'll ask Michael to wrap it up.
So next question, please.
Next up is Steven Fox from Fox Advisors.
Stephen, please unmute yourself.
Try that again. Sorry about that. On the ISG business, I was wondering if you could react to some math that I was so it looks like you're targeting anywhere from $1,000,000,000 to maybe as much as $2,000,000,000 of annual growth off of the core. If that's the case, how much you think that the telco and the edge strategy starts to contribute? It seems like it's small as a percentage of sales, but could be meaningful to growth on top of that.
And what kind of timeline is that on? And within that, is it first about selling more boxes, reference architectures and then software or altogether? Any comments on that would be helpful.
Jeff, do you want to take the start on that one or do you, Jeff and Jeff?
I'll maybe try to start and we'll work our way through it. Again, any of the modeling and referencing that we've talked about today does not include So when you think about the plus range that Tom referred to earlier, it is upside Over time, I do think it's more mid- to longer term oriented growth. But at the same time, we're capturing business today. The new platforms, the XR11, a 1U product, the XR12, a 2U product that has been ruggedized, Short chassis, NEBS compliant, ice lakes and modern architecture into the edge of the network is a winner. That is our core customer base today.
We're selling that in today. We're working with you probably have seen a few announcements from us over the past months around winning ORAN, winning the next generation of this build out of this software defined API driven cloud enabled model built on standard architecture. We are in the door of all major telecom companies who are going through this 5 gs transition and our success is good. The rollout of that will be a bit longer because there's a re architecture that has We have a front row seat Participating aggressively in those opportunities and at the same time selling into our existing customer base with that products that we just mentioned, which were the first, Jeff can correct me here, the first rounds up telco specific products we've built and they've been received quite well. Jeff, anything or Chuck, I may have missed?
No, you nailed it on that. And I think obviously, the server plays a critical role, especially going to Edge. And this goes beyond just telco as well in regards to if it's healthcare or smart manufacturing or what have you and building specific technology and innovation for those use cases is going to be important, right? And we've talked about that before, but we're building an integrated edge platform and some of the things we just service that is very powerful as we go forward.
Yes. And I just add on your materiality question just to keep reiterating what Tom and Jeff have underscored today. We're in the early innings that when that becomes a relevant conversation, we'll provide the appropriate commentary and guidance, right, because but for now we're focused on Engaging customers ensuring that we learn continually and feed it back into our innovation.
But Stephen to your point, It's we referenced it's $114,000,000,000 market growing at 2%, so not big growth. But what's happening is the fundamental change in the architecture. Roughly 70% of the spend is on the radio and the radio side is being disaggregated and opened up. That's the opportunity for us.
Great. Thank you.
Thanks, Steve. All right. Let's take the last question.
Last question will be Rod Hall from Goldman Sachs.
Yes. Thanks, guys. Thanks for fitting me in. I'll make it really quick. The slide that you showed, Tom, on the dividend suggests it's an estimated value, the $1,000,000,000 And I'm wondering estimated based on what?
Is that based on a yield? Because we're calculating the dividend yield on the implied trading value for the stub about 2.5%, but then of course that stub seems like it's really undervalued Dell Technologies after the spin. So I'm curious What your calculus would be if that becomes more, let's call it, fairly valued post the spin?
Well, I would hey, Rod, thank you, by the way, for the question. I would hope over time that we see Then the valuation moved the way we think it needs to move. But in regards to your dividend question, it's targeting $1,000,000,000 They're wanting to do is put a dividend out there of sufficient size within the 40% to 60% free cash flow framework that we've laid out really what investors tell us they're interested in, right? Start a dividend. Obviously, you don't want to fluctuate the dividend down, but you do want to grow it over time as So we think $1,000,000,000 is the right place to start.
That's what we're targeting. And the commentary or the words in the deck were just around. It's that is the target, but obviously the Board needs to approve that as we get into Q1. So that'll be where we go with it.
Great. Thanks.
All right. Thanks for the question, Rod. And we'll turn it over to Michael to wrap things up.
Okay. So thank you all for joining us today, and we appreciate your interest. Just to sum all this up, We've never been stronger. We were built for this moment. And as we've talked about, Dell Technologies has leading positions in Very large and growing markets where we continue to innovate and take share.
And we're deeply ingrained throughout Our customer environments, which gives us unmatched customer relationships and insights. And we use those insights to continue to modernize our offerings with software and automation, artificial intelligence and machine learning, data management and security to create the center of a customer's multi cloud world. And with Apex, We're quite excited about delivering all this in a simple cloud operating model consumption as a service. And we have unique and durable competitive advantages that benefit our core business and we can also build on to capture multibillion dollar opportunities in the adjacencies that we've talked about like Edge and Telco where we can do what others can't. And finally, Dell has a 37 year history of seeing opportunities and relentlessly pursuing them and we see more opportunity ahead than ever before.
Our interests are aligned and focused on long term value creation for all of our stakeholders. And we're already reimagining ourselves for this next wave of growth and human progress as we and our customers collectively create our digital future. So