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earnings

PC sales slump to bite even Microsoft

With the PC market tanking along with the rest of the economy, Microsoft is seen as unlikely to be able to live up to the financial forecast it issued in October.

The company is set to release its quarterly earnings after the markets close on Thursday.

In a further sign of just how rough the economy is, Microsoft is also expected to announce shortly its plans for a significant, companywide layoffs. Although Microsoft has cut jobs in a particular unit or location in the past, it has managed to navigate through all past downturns without having to resort to such … Read more

Sony warns of first loss in 14 years

Consumer electronics giant Sony warned Thursday that it will record a $2.9 billion operating loss this year, its first annual loss in 14 years.

The company, which blamed the loss on sliding demand for its products and a stronger yen, said it will detail plans to restructure late Thursday, according to a Reuters report. The warning follows reports Wednesday that Sony plans to close two television factories in Japan and shed 2,000 jobs.

Sony also said it expects to post a net loss of $1.65 billion in the fiscal year ending March 31. In October, the company … Read more

Is the iPod Touch cannibalizing iPhone sales?

It looks like the iPod's still got a bit of life left. It may no longer be the main driver of innovation at Apple, but the company sold 22.7 million iPods during its fiscal first quarter. That's up 3 percent from the same period last year, although a much slower rate of growth than in previous years. Still, it's growth nonetheless. Not only did Apple beat expectations but the results reported Wednesday also marked an all-time quarterly sales record for its iconic MP3 player.

Meanwhile, iPhone sales actually fell from the previous quarter, from 6.9 … Read more

AMD earnings: More fear, uncertainty, and doubt?

Updated at 11 a.m. PST with additional information from analysts.

These are not ordinary times. Not for Advanced Micro Devices, which reports earnings on Thursday. Nor for Intel.

For starters, AMD said last week that it would slash its workforce by 9 percent and institute temporary salary cuts.

This comes as the company enters the final stages of bifurcating into AMD the product company, which designs chips, and The Foundry Company, which manufactures them. A measure taken to stave off collapse. (There are still a few more steps that have to be taken before the split is sanctioned by … Read more

In times of recession, at least there's IBM

Even as most of its businesses saw declines (unless one adjusts for currency fluctuations), IBM's software business saved IBM's quarter, as Bloomberg reports, growing 9 percent when adjusted for currency. It's a testament to IBM's forward thinking, buying up a range of high-margin software businesses to shore up its financials in times of crisis.

From CNET's report:

"A strong fourth quarter capped an outstanding year," [IBM CEO Samuel] Palmisano said. "In 2008, IBM performed well in an extremely difficult economic environment. Clearly our strategic transformation--migrating to the more profitable segments of the … Read more

IBM earnings beat analyst expectations

Updated at 1:56 p.m. PST, with additional earnings information and after-hours trading performance.

IBM reported Tuesday a 12 percent increase in fourth-quarter earnings, coming in stronger than analysts' expectations.

Big Blue generated net income of $4.4 billion, or $3.28 a share, for the quarter, up 12 percent over the same period a year ago.

Wall Street had expected Big Blue to post earnings of $3.03 a share for the three-month period.

The technology bellwether also reported that it is not only on track to achieve its previously stated goal of generating an annual profit of $… Read more

Intel profits sink in 'uncertain' climate

Updated at 4:25 p.m. PST throughout, including correction to mobile processor revenue

Intel reported Thursday a 90 percent drop in net income for the fourth quarter, as the company continued to cite an "uncertain" environment.

Revenue met the expectations that Intel set last week when it issued a warning on fourth-quarter revenue. The $8.2 billion in revenue amounts to a 23 percent drop from the year-earlier period, when it reported revenue of $10.7 billion.

Profits plunged 90 percent to $234 million, or 4 cents a share, for the quarter. This is in stark contrast … Read more

Motorola plans another round of layoffs

Motorola announced Wednesday that it plans to cut another 4,000 jobs, or about 6 percent of its workforce, and warned that weaker-than-expected handset sales would lead to a fourth-quarter loss.

Motorola said 3,000 jobs would be eliminated from its handset unit, while another 1,000 jobs would be cut from the rest of the company. The cuts announced Wednesday are in addition to 3,000 job cuts Motorola announced in October as part of a broader restructuring that also halted the launch of many upcoming phones.

"The actions we are taking today in our Mobile Devices business … Read more

Red Hat's third-quarter earnings suggest resilience

On Monday Red Hat reported its fiscal third-quarter earnings, saying it generated $165.3 million in total revenues for the quarter, an increase of 22 percent from the third quarter of 2007 and a slight bump of 1 percent from the second quarter of 2008. While revenues barely missed analysts' expectations, profits exceeded expectations by 4 cents per share.

Red Hat's earnings came on the back of strong subscription revenue, which hit $135.5 million in the quarter or 82 percent of total revenues, rising 17 percent year over year but flattening out sequentially. Red Hat expects to hit $166 million to $167.5 million in its fourth-quarter 2008 revenues.

To put this in perspective, last quarter Red Hat grew 29 percent over its first-quarter revenues, while in third-quarter 2007 it grew revenues year over year by 28 percent.

In other words, the third fiscal quarter of 2008 (which ended November 30) demonstrated another solid performance by Red Hat, as Red Hat CFO Charlie Peters and CEO Jim Whitehurst reported, but clearly the recession (and particularly the fluctuating exchange rates) is having an effect on Red Hat's ability to grow, just as it is on everyone else. Even so, 22 percent growth in the wake of one of the worst financial meltdowns in history is no mean feat.

One of the big talking points from the earnings call is currency devaluation, which hit Red Hat for $7 million in revenue (last quarter the dollar hurt Red Hat to the tune of $1 million in revenue), and was blamed for the lower-than-expected overall revenues and net income. Currency devaluation, of course, was a product of the global recession, which was the subtext for the entire call, but importantly, Red Hat delivered strong results through a terrible economic environment.

For me, the biggest indicator of Red Hat's strength is that it renewed each of its top-25 contracts that came due in the quarter at 106 percent of contract value. This represents a little lower attainment than in the past in terms of contract value, but this decline apparently stems from one or two large financial services deals that came at lower value than others in the top-25.

Even so, the fact that those financial services companies renewed at all is telling, given that they were hemorrhaging. Indeed, Red Hat's Peters indicated that Red Hat has now renewed all of its significant financial services customers.

A few additional data points from the call:

Red Hat now has over 3,000 application certifications (with over 2,100 ISV partners), making it the Linux application leader; 23 percent operating margin, an improvement of 100 basis points over Q2; 82 percent of Red Hat's revenue is recurring and subscription based, delivering 93 to 94 percent subscription margins, which has remained steady over the past few years (Q3 services revenue was 43 percent in margin, up from 39 percent in Q2); Red Hat boosted its deferred revenue balance by 20 percent on a year-over-year basis to $505.1 million, which represents a 2 percent sequential gain. This means Red Hat continues to sell longer-term deals or fewer longer-term deals with a greater dollar value. Either way, Red Hat has money parked in the bank, waiting to be recognized;… Read more

What Oracle stands to gain from open source

On Thursday Oracle, one of the strongest enterprise software vendors, reported weak earnings, as reported by The Wall Street Journal. Most troubling is Oracle's first year-on-year decline in new software sales in five years, with license revenue falling by 3 percent from 2007.

Some of Oracle's struggles relate to a strengthening dollar, as CNET suggests. But with more than half of its revenues coming from maintenance, Oracle needs to forage for new customers paying for new license deals, rather than simply consolidating the industry to buy its way into new customers.

In short, Oracle needs to expand its … Read more