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- IBM comes up short of Q1 2013 estimates with $23.4B in revenue, EPS of $3.00 due to falling demand
Today IBM reported its first quarter financial performance with revenue of $23.4 billion, net income of $3.4 billion, and earnings per share (EPS) of $3.00. It had a non-GAAP operating income of $3.4 billion and a non-GAAP gross profit margin of 46.7 percent. The diminished performance was due to falling demand within its software and mainframe business.
Wall Street analysts estimated that Big Blue, as it’s also commonly called in the industry, would have revenues of $24.7 billion and EPS of $3.06. The company’s earnings today are being eyed as a benchmark on where the enterprise tech spending will go.
According to IBM’s chairman, president, and CEO Ginni Rometty:
In the first quarter, we grew operating net income, earnings per share and expanded operating margins, but we did not achieve all of our goals in the period. Despite a solid start and good client demand, we did not close a number of software and mainframe transactions that have moved into the second quarter. The services business performed as expected with strong profit growth and significant new business in the quarter.
According to Deutsche Bank analyst Chris Whitmore: “We expect solid results in hardware, mixed software results and in-line Services. We believe healthy new mainframe sales will offset mixed software results due to continued longer sales cycles, fiscal cliff issues, etc. We also expect margins to be supported by cost cutting/global delivery initiatives. We expect IBM to guide to 10% EPS growth in FY13.”
The results of the company’s performance comes a day following IBM’s announcement that it would invest $1 billion in flash technology, something that would help it compete better in the big data market. The case IBM seems to be making is that server DRAM is soon going to become outdated and that disk drives will go the way of the dinosaur. The company believes that by adding an all-flash storage array as “an option within storage area networks”, any company can improve the way their applications and database perform without needing to change any of their software.
IBM didn’t just leave $1 billion to flash technology. Rather, it went and created 12 storage centers around the world to help it run a proof-of-concept scenario.
Of course, while this might be good for the IBM, not everything is rosy for the computer service company. Today, it announced that it would be cutting as much as 14 percent of its workforce (about 1,400 people) in France. These layoffs comes as the Armonk, New York-based firm is finding ways to reduce its expenses in Europe while there is continued economic turmoil on the continent. However, according to Bloomberg Businessweek, IBM is shifting more resources to find ways to appease the growing market in other regions of the world, specifically Africa.
In normal trading, IBM is down 1.20 percent to close out at $207.15. In after-hours trading, the company is up 0.14 percent.
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