Technology
IBM Company Earnings Bring Cheers, but Big Blue Has No Real Growth
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International Business Machines Corp. (NYSE: IBM) is the largest DJIA stock by its weighting, and it has just reported its company earnings for the second quarter of 2013. IBM’s report was up 8% on adjusted earnings of $3.91 per share. Revenue was down 3% to $24.9 billion, but this was projected to be only down 1% if you would back out the effects of currencies. Estimates from Thomson Reuters were $3.77 in earnings per share and $25.37 billion in sales. That earnings number is up compares to $3.51 and the sales figure compares to $25.78 billion a year ago.
IBM said that it is raising its 2013 operating earnings per share guidance by $0.20 to $16.90 per share. This is excluding its $1 billion workforce rebalancing (layoff) charges. Thomson Reuters has the consensus earnings estimate for 2013 of $16.64 per share.
One key metric we focus on is the services backlog. This backlog was up by 3% to $141 billion, but the backlog would have been up 7% if you adjust for currency changes. Other metrics are as follows:
IBM shares closed up 0.3% at $194.50 against a 52-week trading range of $183.55 to $215.90. The stock is indicated up over 2% at $199.10 in the after-hours trading session. This is a beat on earnings but is light on sales, a trend we are seeing more and more of.
This stock may be higher based upon Wall Street and investors looking at the bottom-line numbers and the guidance based upon buybacks. We are encouraged about a strong services backlog remaining in place, but there is still one very obvious situation: IBM just cannot find any systemic growth that offers a compelling story here.
We also have shown over and over how and why IBM also needs to step up to the plate regarding its paltry dividend yield as well. Buybacks have outshined dividends in our latest analysis using buyback versus dividend ETFs, but the buyback in this case of IBM is only holding its shares up rather than driving shares higher.
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