Tuesday, January 22, 2013

Reuters: Hot Stocks: UPDATE 3-IBM's shines with fourth quarter, 2013 outlook

Reuters: Hot Stocks
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UPDATE 3-IBM's shines with fourth quarter, 2013 outlook
Jan 23rd 2013, 00:33

Tue Jan 22, 2013 7:33pm EST

  * Q4 revenue of $29.3 bln vs Street view $29.05 bln      * EPS was $5.39 vs $5.25, sees 2013 EPS of at least $16.70      * Shares up more than 4 percent     (Adds analyst comment)      By Nicola Leske      Jan 22 (Reuters) - IBM, the world's largest  technology services company, gave a better than expected 2013  outlook after a solid fourth quarter that analysts say has more  to do with Big Blue's smooth execution than a vibrant tech  spending environment.      Companies had been widely expected to hold back on IT  purchases in December in part because of worries about the  so-called U.S. fiscal cliff. Automatic tax increases and  spending cuts would have been triggered had Congress not made a  deal to avert the cliff and could have pushed the weak U.S.  economy into recession.       But International Business Machines Corp said on Tuesday  that its quarterly results beat forecasts and it plans to  achieve earnings of at least $16.70 a share for the full year,  above analysts' consensus forecast of $16.57.      While some analysts said IBM's earnings may be a sign of an  improved tech spending environment, others said the strong  results were specific to IBM's business model.      "IBM is better positioned in a tough environment than most  tech companies are," said Cindy Shaw, managing director at  Discern.      IBM made a bold strategic move a decade ago when it bought  PriceWaterhouse's consulting business and then decided to exit  the PC business, betting its future was in finding solutions to  business problems with the help of software and technology.      That strategy appears to have paid off.      "What IBM does better than anyone, with the exception of  Accenture, is solving problems and I am not talking about taking  out some costs, but really driving revenue," Shaw said.      In addition, she said, IBM was strong in "hot growth  markets" such as data analytics, cloud computing, emerging  markets and what IBM calls smarter planet, which aims to improve  areas such traffic, power grids of food production.      Sterne Agee analyst Shaw Wu agreed, saying the success  appeared to be more specific to IBM than the industry in  general.      "The results show that the IBM advantage and business model  - vertical integration of hardware and software - is difficult  to replicate," he said.      "IBM has been doing this the longest and customers are very  accustomed to it. They have a much stronger offering and brand  name."      As a result quarterly net income rose 10 percent to $6.1  billion, or $5.39 a share from $4.71 a year earlier. Revenue  dropped 1 percent to $29.3 billion due to the sale of its retail  business in the third quarter.          Analysts had expected the Armonk, New York-based company to  report net income of $5.95 billion, or $5.25 a share, on revenue  of $29.05 billion, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.      Revenue grew in particular because of an 11 percent increase  in IBM's growth markets in Brazil, India, Russia and China.      Software revenue was up 3 percent in the quarter.                 Some analysts said IBM's better than expected results were a  sign that tech spending might not have been as bleak as  expected.      "It is better than what people had feared," said Brian  Marshall, an analyst at ISI Group.      "Virtually every segment did a little bit better than people  expected. It supports the fact that things are getting better  out there at least from a tech industry standpoint."      Andrew Bartels, an analyst with research firm Forrester  Research, said: "We were expecting a lot of companies were  sitting on their wallets until it became clear what was going to  become of the fiscal cliff.      "Given the fact it's Q4 with a cloud of the fiscal cliff,  it's a positive indication that tech software will be doing  better in the next couple of months."      IBM shares rose more than 4 percent to $204.50 after closing  at $196.08 on the New York Stock Exchange.     (Additional reporting by Jennifer Saba in New York and Alistair  Barr in San Francisco; Editing by Richard Chang and Andre  Grenon)  
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