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Showing posts with label IBM. Show all posts
Showing posts with label IBM. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 23, 2011

8/23/2011

HP wants to quite PC business

Fast Changing world has change the thinking of HP,

Although the world is dependent on personal computers, making them has not been a great business for most American companies for almost a decade.Hewlett-Packard's announcement that it was considering offloading its PC business, even though it is the undisputed worldwide market leader, is a sign of the difficulties.

If HP goes through with the idea, it would follow IBM which was one of the first to recognise the long-term problems and, in 2005, sold its business to Lenovo, a Chinese company. Other American makers like Compaq (acquired by HP), Gateway and Packard Bell were absorbed by others or just faded away. Depending on how HP sheds the unit - it could sell or spin it off as a separate company - only two American PC makers would remain.

Source:

New York Times


Tuesday, April 21, 2009

4/21/2009

IBM reports slight drop in profits

Company confident restructuring will protect it

IBM has reported a one per cent drop in profits in its quarterly earnings statement but is bullish about the future of 2009.

Speaking at a press call chief financial officer Mark Loughridge said that prior restructuring from IBM, to move it away from relying on hardware, had left it well placed to survive the downturn.

“We’ve built a more resilient business model,” he said.

“This year all of pre-tax profit came from software, services and financing. Hardware sales are more vulnerable to downturns.”

This was shown in the 24 per cent decline in hardware revenues, with mainframe and server sales falling sharply, although UNIX server revenue held up. In comparison services revenue was down 10 per cent and software sales also down six per cent

Overall IBM’s quarterly revenue fell by 11 per cent to $21.71bn, but the company said that seven per cent of that figure was down to the increased strength on the dollar. Profit fell one per cent to $2.30bn.

The company did particularly well from government spending this quarter, with new signings from the public sector up 200 per cent. Central government was investing in systems that would create jobs Loughridge said, while local and state governments were more interested in cutting costs.

IBM is now putting more emphasis on global markets in emerging nations he continued. Sales in India were up 12 per cent, making IBM the largest supplier and up 11 per cent in China.