By Maria Armental
International Business Machines Corp. on Tuesday reported
another quarter of sharply lower profit as revenue continued
declining across its segments.
The struggling technology giant, which last quarter said it was
abandoning its long-held target of making at least $20 a share by
2015, forecast earnings for the year of $15.75 to $16.50 a share,
below the $16.51 estimated by Wall Street.
The disappointing outlook sent shares down about 2% after
hours.
The fourth quarter marked the 11th consecutive period the
Armonk, N.Y, company has failed to generate a year-over-year
revenue increase. Its profit excluding one-time items easily beat
expectations, however.
The company behind punched cards, floppy disks and the
Jeopardy-winning computer system Watson traces its roots to 1911,
when New York financier Charles Flint merged three manufacturing
companies, creating the Computing-Tabulating-Recording Company. In
time, the company moved away from its computing-scale and
time-clock businesses, focusing on tabulating machines for business
use. The company was renamed IBM in 1924.
To improve profitability, IBM exited low-margin businesses,
selling, for example, its commodity server business to Lenovo Group
Ltd. and transferring its semiconductor unit to Globalfoundries
Inc.
In its latest reinvention bid, IBM is shifting to cloud
computing and software and so-called big-data analytics. Its latest
bet: the z13, a refrigerator-sized mainframe designed to handle
exponential mobile transaction volumes.
On Tuesday, IBM said revenue from its global technology services
segment fell 7.6% from the year-earlier period ti $9.17 billion,
while the global business service segment logged an 8.4% drop to
$4.35 billion. Software revenue, meanwhile, fell 6.9% to $7.58
billion. Systems and technology, which includes the company's
computers, posted a 39% decrease to $2.41 billion.
Overall, IBM reported earnings of $5.48 billion, or $5.51 a
share, down from $6.19 billion, or $5.73 a share, a year earlier.
Excluding acquisition- and retirement-related costs, profit from
continuing operations was $5.81 a share.
Total revenue fell to $24.11 billion.
Analysts had expected $5.41 a share on $24.77 billion in
revenue.
Write to Maria Armental at maria.armental@wsj.com
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