IBM forecasts strong '08 earnings tied to global growth
Stellar performance overseas have prompted IBM Corp to upgrade its outlook for 2008 despite economic uncertainty at home.
Investors responded to Thursday's report by IBM by sending its shares up $4.91, 4.9 per cent, to $106.01.
While many companies are warning of a recession in the U.S. and issuing cautious guidance, IBM advised analysts to significantly increase their expectations. Chief Financial Officer Mark Loughridge said earnings should be $8.20 to $8.30 (euro5.60 to euro5.65) per share this year, well ahead of the $7.94 (euro5.40) analysts had been forecasting.
The optimism was striking because of the cloudy economic backdrop and IBM's reliance on the troubled financial-services industry for more than one-fourth of its revenue. Plus, IBM is typically conservative on such predictions.
``They certainly defied conventional wisdom,'' said Shaw Wu, an analyst with American Technology Research.
Loughridge acknowledged that ``we have an uncertain economic environment that we're working through along with the rest of the business world.'' But he expects IBM to be carried by its aggressive investments to expand its sales efforts in developing markets. He said the chance to help establish computing networks in such places as Eastern Europe, Vietnam and China amounted to ``the gold rush of the 21st century.''
Analysts were particularly struck by Loughridge's revelation that more than one-fifth of IBM's revenue now comes from countries where IBM's sales are growing better than 10 percent. In comparison, IBM's US revenue was flat in the fourth quarter.
And many analysts expect worldwide spending on information technology overall to grow at the low end of its usual range this year.
In other words, IBM's optimism reflects the particulars of its size and ever-more international focus and might not say much about the prospects for most other tech companies. Even Intel Corp, which gets 75 per cent of its revenue outside the US more than IBM's 65 per cent issued financial guidance this week that was cautious because of US economic pressures.
IBM is "kind of a unique case," Wu said. "There are not many guys having this capability. IBM might not be the best barometer anymore."
In the last three months of 2007, IBM earned $3.95 billion (euro2.69 billion), or $2.80 (euro1.91) per share, on revenue of $28.9 billion (euro19.67 billion). The net profit rose 12 percent from a year earlier, when IBM made $3.54 billion, $2.31 per share, on revenue of $26.3 billion.
IBM's 10 percent revenue gain would have been 4 per cent if not for weakness in the dollar. Payments in other currencies now translate into more dollars.
IBM had released the per-share and revenue figures Monday because the numbers were well beyond Wall Street's forecasts. Analysts surveyed by Thomson Financial had been expecting $2.60 (euro1.77) per share on revenue of $27.8 billion (euro18.92 billion).
The software division's revenue rose 12 per cent to $6.3 billion (euro4.29 billion). The gain would have been 6 percent if not for weakness in the dollar.
Services revenue leaped 17 per cent to $14.9 billion. The increase would have been 10 per cent at constant dollar values.
In another closely watched measure, IBM services unit signed $15.4 billion (euro10.48 billion) in new contracts in the fourth quarter, down 13 percent. Those signings reflect revenue that will flow to the company in the coming years.
A weak spot was IBM's crucial mainframe business, which saw a 15 percent sales decline. Loughridge said customers appeared to be waiting for a new mainframe model being released this winter.
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