IBM shares fall on soft profit outlook

Reuters

Published Jan 19, 2018 09:44AM ET

IBM shares fall on soft profit outlook

By Supantha Mukherjee

(Reuters) - Shares in International Business Machines (NYSE:IBM) fell 2.6 percent on Friday as analysts judged a "disappointing" full-year profit forecast showed that the company would take more time to get back on a path of steady growth.

IBM's results call after U.S. markets closed on Thursday forecast an operating profit of at least $13.80 per share for 2018, compared with $13.80 in 2017 and market expectations of $13.92, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.

The outlook came on the back of the computing services and hardware firm's first quarterly revenue growth in six years.

"While slight growth is a modest positive, we were largely underwhelmed by IBM's results, and felt the numbers showed IBM has much more work to do to turn the ship around," Deutsche Bank (DE:DBKGn) analyst Sherri Scribner wrote in a client note.

IBM's 3.6 percent revenue growth came mostly from a 71 percent jump in sales of its new Z14 mainframe, which was launched in September, and a 27 percent growth in its cloud business.

Several analysts pointed to the traditionally cyclical nature of mainframe revenues, which tend to surge for 2-4 quarters after the launch of a new launch before falling off.

But some said the growth since IBM launched its Z14 in September hinted at a different outcome.

Morgan Stanley (NYSE:MS) analyst Katy Huberty said the new mainframe's heightened focus on security was attracting more new customers and workloads rather than just upgrades at a time when cyberattacks and chip vulnerability are at the top of buyer's list of concerns.

A growth in the mainframe business might also improve IBM's margins. The company's fourth-quarter adjusted gross margins of 49.5 percent fell short of market expectations of 50.8 percent.

IBM has been moving away from its shrinking hardware and software businesses to what it calls "strategic imperatives," which includes the contribution of cloud computing – where companies use a remote network of data centers instead of their own hardware to cut costs.

Strategic Imperatives grew 14 percent in the quarter.

"Looking under the surface, however, it appears that strategic imperatives excluding Systems only grew 6 percent, largely driven by the lack of Cognitive Solutions growth," Berenberg analyst Josep Bori said.

"This is clearly not enough to offset the declining core business," he said.

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IBM said it would continue to "maintain a high level of investment" in 2018 as it boosts its capabilities on cloud, mobile, cybersecurity and data analytics.