HP's third quarter propped up by EDS buyout

Sales of printers, PCs and servers all declined sharply, but HP's services business was a bright spot

Hewlett-Packard reported a 2 percent drop in revenue for the July quarter, which was better than expected, and said its business is stabilizing.

Net earnings for the quarter, the third of HP's fiscal year, were US$1.6 billion, or $0.67 per share, down from $2.0 billion, or $0.80 per share, in the same quarter a year earlier, HP announced Tuesday.

The company's purchase of services giant EDS last year again helped to prop up its results. Revenue from HP's services business almost doubled thanks to the acquisition, to $8.5 billion, while sales of printers, servers and desktop PCs all declined sharply from a year earlier, HP said.

Overall revenue came in at $27.5 billion, better than the $27.3 billion financial analysts had been expecting, according to Thomson Reuters. The net profit before restructuring costs and other one-time items was $0.91 per share, a penny better than the analyst forecast.

"HP's performance this quarter is a result of our strong business portfolio, efficient cost structure and scale," Chairman and CEO Mark Hurd said in a prepared statement. "Business is stabilizing, and we are confident that HP will be an early beneficiary of an economic turnaround and will continue to outperform when conditions improve."

Revenue from HP's Personal Systems Group, which sells desktop and laptop PCs, declined 18 percent from a year ago, to $8.4 billion, though unit shipments increased by 2 percent, HP said.

The printing and imaging group reported a 20 percent drop in revenue, to $5.7 billion, while HP's Enterprise Storage and Servers division saw revenue decline 23 percent, to $3.7 billion. Software revenue declined 22 percent to $847 million, while revenue from financial services slipped 1 percent to $670 million, HP said.

Other large tech companies, including IBM, Cisco Systems, Microsoft and Intel, have all reported declining revenue for the last quarter, as businesses kept a tight rein on spending and conserved cash.

Like HP, however, several companies have said demand may be picking up, and there have been positive signs even for the beleaguered PC market. Intel said last month that conditions in the PC market were improving and predicted a stronger second half, while Dell said that demand was stabilizing.

Cisco, SAP and IBM, which all depend heavily on large enterprises for their business, have given encouraging outlooks for the rest of the year, although as Cisco CEO John Chambers said two weeks ago, it will take several more quarters to tell if a recovery is underway.

More about: Cisco, Cisco Systems, Dell, EDS, Hewlett-Packard, HP, IBM, IBM Australia, Intel, Microsoft, Reuters, SAP, Systems Group

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