July 18, 2007 1:20 PM PDT

Strong services revenue lifts IBM's second quarter

by Martin LaMonica
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IBM on Wednesday reported strong revenue and income growth for second quarter 2007, in a sign that the company has improved profitability in its giant professional services division.

Excluding a one-time gain from the sale of its printing division, IBM reported diluted earnings of $1.50 per share, beating analysts' expectations by 3 cents.

A 10 percent increase in Global Services helped fuel second-quarter revenue of $23.8 billion. Income rose 8 percent to $2.2 billion, excluding an $81 million windfall from the sale of its printing division.

IBM Software--a crucial part of its revenue growth strategy as IBM sees declining hardware revenue growth--saw a 13 percent rise in revenue, 9 percent adjusted for currency, compared with the second quarter of 2006.

Revenue from its Systems and Technology hardware division rose 2 percent, or flat adjusted for currency.

Update: During a conference call with financial analysts, IBM's chief financial officer Mark Loughridge said that the second quarter was one of IBM's strongest in years. He raised IBM's full-year outlook, saying IBM now expects earnings per share to rise between 14 and 15 percent this year.

Loughridge added demand for corporate IT products appears solid around the world.

"I think we saw a relatively improving economy. Not the strength of 2006 but we didn't see the tail-off that we saw in the last month of Q1" continue into the second quarter of this year, he said.

Performance from developing markets, where IBM has invested heavily, were particularly strong, with revenue from India and China growing at over 30 percent. IBM's goal is to double revenue growth from India, China, Russia, Brazil over the next four years.

IBM's services business, which is combating lower-cost competition from outsourcing firms in India, performed well in India, with over 30 percent revenue growth, he noted.

"We're beating the local competition on their own turf," he said.

Loughridge also said that IBM is making good progress on its long-term objectives to increasingly draw profits from software and high-margin services. Software is now IBM's largest provider of profit and the most stable contributor to revenue growth, he said.

Analysts welcomed the news of the strong quarter as IBM's stock climbed over three percent in after-hours trading, the same week that its stock reached a five-year high.

"The pieces of the puzzle are coming together for the company and, as a result, IBM is working to increase momentum and gain market share," said Eugene Zakharov, analyst at Technology Business Research.

"Now that IBM has generated that growth momentum now, it is likely to sustain its growth for some time to come," said Annex Research analyst Bob Djurdjevic.

Martin LaMonica is a senior writer for CNET's Green Tech blog. He started at CNET News in 2002, covering IT and Web development. Before that, he was executive editor at IT publication InfoWorld. E-mail Martin.
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IBM started becoming profitable
by Troll Hard July 18, 2007 2:15 PM PDT
when it dumped OS/2 to Serenity instead.

OS/2 was dragging down IBM for years.
Reply to this comment
How did you...
by Commander_Spock July 18, 2007 3:38 PM PDT
... arrive at that conclusion (are you an IBM insider or what?); better yet, how can a company show profit "overnight" from a product which was/is still in the process-of-development. If there is much truth (that perhaps both IBM and Microsoft are not making money from OS/2) about what you are saying about OS/2 then why do "you" think that OS/2's Source-Codes have not been handed over to the Open-Source Development Communities which will be only too happy to "sink their teeth" into those OS/2 Source-Codes!
Huh! "IBM's....
by Commander_Spock July 19, 2007 5:27 AM PDT
... goal is to double revenue growth from India, China, Russia, Brazil over the next four years." It would be nice if they can re-think/reconsider their bungled strategy of abandoning the OS/2 Operating System Platform (being very much alive) which is very much still relied upon by various entities in the Russian Federation. See the attached link:

http://en.ecomstation.ru/solutions/?action=solutions
Reply to this comment
What about the "Timothy Sipples" Recommendatios!
by Commander_Spock July 19, 2007 6:14 AM PDT
"New Open Source Office Suite from IBM"

http://www.bityard.com/article.php?sid=179#Adds

In view of IBM's goal to double revenue growth from India, China, Russia... and in view of Russian and Chinese companies' economic interests in the Americas: see the attached link:

"RUSAL to mull hydropower
-refinery, smelter studies also on the cards"

http://www.stabroeknews.com/index.pl/article?id=56513627

The above mentioned activities may very well draw on the best talents in computing and computing technologies throughout the countries nationals. The financial and economic results from these ventures are left/yet to be seen!
Reply to this comment
Oops... "Recommendations"....
by Commander_Spock July 19, 2007 6:17 AM PDT
... instead of "Recommendatios"!
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