By
Erica Ogg
Wednesday, May 20 2009 09:37 AM
URL:
http://www.zdnetasia.com/news/hardware/0,39042972,62054197,00.htm
Hewlett-Packard announced Tuesday its revenue and earnings all took a tumble for the second quarter of 2009.
HP's net earnings of US$1.7 billion for the quarter was down 17 percent from US$2.1 billion earned the same quarter a year ago. Quarterly revenue of US$27.4 billion was down 3 percent. Earnings per share amounted to 86 cents per share, on track with what analysts had been expecting, but came out to US$0.70 per share due to a US$382 million (US$0.16 per share) after-tax charge the company took for acquisitions and restructuring that took place during the quarter.
It's the second straight quarter
of declines for HP. Chief executive Mark Hurd tried to put a positive spin
on the results.
"HP executed well in a tough market environment," Hurd said in a call with
analysts Tuesday afternoon.
Tough was an apt description. Revenue was down in all regions with the
exception of North and South America, where revenue increased 9 percent from a
year ago to US$12.1 billion. Revenue fell 11 percent in Europe, the Middle East
and Africa, and 10 percent in the Asia Pacific region to US$10.6 billion and US$4.7
billion, respectively.
The main bright spot appears to be the services division, whose US$8.5 billion
in revenue was up 99 percent. But it's an unfair comparison since the main
portion of that business is derived from the
EDS acquisition,
which took place in August last year.
Chief Financial Officer Cathie Lesjak noted that HP is pleased with the
integration process related to EDS. Roughly half of the 25,000 positions HP
pledged to eliminate after the acquisition have been removed so far, she said.
An additional 6,400 jobs will be cut this year, but she did not say which
departments they would come from.
All other business divisions--storage, computers, imaging and printing,
software, and financial services--saw revenues drop. It's not unexpected that
the economy is catching up to HP, despite the company's emphasis on strict
fiscal discipline.
There were some positive signs, like some stronger demand in China and
incremental improvements in the U.S. consumer market, according to Hurd. But he
was hesitant to say he sees any sort of overall improvement in demand from
corporate customers or a general turnaround in the economy--yet.
"You can view this as sort of 'steady as she goes,'" he told analysts. "The
quarter behaved generally as we expected."
And looking ahead, he expects much of the same the rest of the year.
"Customers are telling us they are delaying (ordering PCs and servers) as
long as they can," and he said he does not expect any dramatic change that will
alter projected enterprise spending within the next few months.
"We need another quarter of data to make a meaningful statement about any
upturn."
HP is forecasting earnings of US$0.64 to US$0.68 per share for the third
quarter.
HP stock was down 4.9 percent in after-hours trading to US$34.80.
This article was first published as a blog post on CNET News.