With its headquarters located in Palo Alto, California, HP Inc. was established in 1939. When the original Hewlett-Packard Company divided into two businesses in 2015, HP Inc. was established. Its enterprise division became Hewlett Packard Enterprise, while its personal computer and printer divisions formed HP Inc. David Packard and Bill Hewlett established Hewlett-Packard in 1939. In the US and abroad, HP Inc. offers personal computers, printing, 3D printing, gaming, hybrid work, and other associated technologies.

HP Company Quick Overview
| Details | Info |
| Origin Country | United States |
| Founded | 1939 |
| Founder | Bill Hewlett and Dave Packard |
| Headquarters | Palo Alto, California, United States |
| MD/CEO | Enrique Lores |
| Hubs | Global operations across Americas, EMEA, and APAC regions |
| Subsidiary | None major standalone; related business units under HP Inc. |
| Owner | Publicly traded company with widely dispersed shareholders |
| Net Worth (Approx.) | ~$20–25 billion market capitalization |
| Official Website | https://www.hp.com/ |
Net Worth and Market Cap
As of February 13, 2026, Hewlett Packard Enterprise’s market capitalization, or net value, is $30.26 billion. In just one year, its market capitalization has grown by 6.20%. The company is worth $48.49 billion.
Corporate leadership
In 1939, Bill Hewlett and David Packard established Hewlett Packard in a Palo Alto, California, one-car garage. Bruce D. Broussard serves as the interim CEO, while Chip Bergh is the chairman.
Overview of Services
HP manufactures workstations, servers, printers, scanners, displays, accessories, and personal computers (PCs; desktops and laptops for consumers and businesses), as well as associated software and services including 3D printing.
In addition to AI-powered PCs sold under the Omni brand, such as the OmniBook, OmniDesk, and OmniStudio, its consumer PCs as of 2024 include the Essential line and Pavilion (consumer), Envy (high-end and prosumer), and Omen (gaming). The “Pro” and “Elite” prefixes are used to market HP business computers. The HP Z series of desktop workstations and the HP ZBook, its mobile counterpart, are marketed by HP in the business sector.
Additionally, it produces the ScanJet range of image scanners and the OfficeJet, DeskJet, LaserJet, and Envy printer series.
Workstations, retail point-of-sale systems, thin clients, displays, hybrid systems, software, endpoint security and services, and lifecycle services like support and deployment, configurations, and extended warranty services are all provided by the Personal Systems segment.
The Printing segment focuses on graphics, 3D printing, and customization solutions for the commercial and industrial markets. It also offers office and home printing solutions, as well as hardware, consumables, and solutions for consumer and commercial printers.
Scale of Operations
The business is divided into three divisions: Corporate Investments, Printing, and Personal Systems. Across the Americas, Europe, the Middle East, Africa, Asia Pacific, Japan, and beyond, Hewlett Packard Enterprise Company and its subsidiaries provide intelligent solutions. Server, Networking, Hybrid Cloud, Financial Services, and Corporate Investments and Other are its five business segments.