
Here is a question worth asking.
When a hospital buys AI diagnostic software, when a bank deploys a new cybersecurity platform, or when a business installs a new data centre rack, who actually makes that transaction happen?
Not the software company, nor the hyperscaler.
The answer, in Australia and New Zealand, is often Dicker Data Ltd (ASX: DDR).
The Sydney-based technology distributor sits in the middle of the entire AI infrastructure supply chain, connecting more than 10,000 reseller partners with the world’s leading technology vendors.
It is an unglamorous position, but also an extraordinarily promising one.
What happened at the AGM this week
Dicker Data jumped 8% on Wednesday after AGM commentary confirmed the strong FY26 momentum investors had been hoping for.
Unaudited gross revenue for the first four months of FY26 rose 13.4% to $1.27 billion. Net profit before tax jumped 45.5% to $47.3 million.
Management attributed the result to elevated endpoint demand, software growth, and data centre refresh activity across enterprise customers.
CEO and Executive Chair Fiona Brown said those drivers were accelerating rather than slowing, pointing to further growth ahead.
That is a meaningful upgrade to sentiment for a stock that had been down 6% in 2026 before Wednesday’s session.
A new growth vector that many investors have missed
On 21 April 2026, CrowdStrike announced an expansion of its Managed Security Service Provider strategy across Japan and Asia Pacific, naming Dicker Data as a key distributor to onboard and support MSSPs delivering AI-driven Falcon platform security to small and medium-sized businesses.
This appointment deepens Dicker Data’s role from hardware distributor to a recurring, higher-margin cybersecurity services platform, capturing a slice of CrowdStrike’s extraordinary momentum.
CrowdStrike itself just reported its best year on record, with its founder and CEO George Kurtz stating:
As enterprises rapidly adopt AI, CrowdStrike is mission-critical infrastructure. The AI revolution is creating a massive growth opportunity, one that our technology, team, and ecosystem are well positioned to continue winning.
Every dollar of that CrowdStrike growth in Asia Pacific now flows partly through Dicker Data’s distribution network.
The macro backdrop is supportive
Gartner projects Australian IT spending to reach $172.3 billion in 2026, up 8.9% year on year.
Every dollar of enterprise AI spending in Australia creates demand for the hardware, software licences, and infrastructure products that Dicker Data distributes.
The Windows 10 end-of-life refresh cycle is also adding a meaningful volume tailwind as businesses replace ageing endpoints with AI-capable hardware.
The valuation and risks
Dicker Data trades on a price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio of approximately 20 times, a material discount to the peer average of 41 times for technology distributors globally.
Jarden carries a buy rating with an $11 price target, while Wilsons Advisory is overweight with an $11.07 target, both implying meaningful upside from the current price of around $9.64.
The stock pays fully-franked quarterly dividends, with a trailing yield of approximately 4.7%, adding an income dimension that is rare among technology stocks.
The main risk is margin pressure.
Dicker Data operates on thin margins of approximately 3.3%, and a shift toward larger, more competitive enterprise deals has squeezed profitability even as revenue has grown.
Any slowdown in enterprise AI spending would hit volumes quickly.
Foolish Takeaway
Dicker Data is an exciting ASX tech stock.
The company sits at the intersection of every AI transaction in Australia and New Zealand and takes a margin on each one.
As Australian enterprise AI spending accelerates toward $172 billion, that position looks increasingly valuable.
At 20 times earnings with a 4.7% fully-franked yield, this ASX tech stock is priced like a mature distributor rather than a beneficiary of one of the biggest technology investment cycles in history.
The post This ASX tech stock could be one of the most overlooked AI infrastructure plays on the market appeared first on The Motley Fool Australia.
Should you invest $1,000 in Dicker Data right now?
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Motley Fool contributor Mark Verhoeven has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool Australia’s parent company Motley Fool Holdings Inc. has positions in and has recommended CrowdStrike. The Motley Fool Australia’s parent company Motley Fool Holdings Inc. has recommended Gartner. The Motley Fool Australia has positions in and has recommended Dicker Data. The Motley Fool Australia has recommended CrowdStrike. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy. This article contains general investment advice only (under AFSL 400691). Authorised by Scott Phillips.