IBM Stock: Turnaround Gaining Pace, But Is It A Buy?

 | Oct 09, 2020 01:47PM ET

The past decade was a lost one for International Business Machines (NYSE:IBM). The software and services giant remained irrelevant in the fast-changing technology world, failing to innovate itself and losing ground to new entrants.

During Virginia Rometty’s eight years at the helm, IBM proved to be dead money for investors. This was the decade when Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN), Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT) and Netflix (NASDAQ:NFLX) all rallied as demand soared for computing power and applications.

IBM’s stock dropped 24% under Rometty’s leadership, the only U.S. tech company currently valued at $100 billion or more to lose value in that period. Shares of the other 16 most valuable tech companies gained anywhere from 64% (Qualcomm (NASDAQ:QCOM)) to 3,468% (Netflix).

But since her departure early this year, there are signs that Big Blue, as it's sometimes referred to colloquially, is gaining lost ground. IBM's new management structure has brightened prospects for the company’s long-term growth after many years of declining sales.

Arvind Krishna, who headed the company’s cloud and cognitive-software division, is now the CEO. Jim Whitehurst, who was chief executive of Red Hat, the open-source software giant that IBM acquired for about $34 billion last year, was appointed the company’s president.

IBM stock closed up 7.4% on Thursday after the company announced that it would spin off its managed infrastructure services unit, currently part of its global technology services division, into a new public company, as part of its hybrid cloud strategy.

Shares of this legacy tech giant, which dominated computing's early decades with inventions like the mainframe and later the floppy disk, traded at $131.49 at yesterday’s close, almost unchanged for the year.