BREAKING NEWS
News While It's Still Hot

IBM's Q1 Driven by Mainframes, Unix, Services, and the Weak Dollar

Published: April 16, 2008

by Timothy Prickett Morgan

That good ole annuity-style revenue stream, which accounts for a little more than half of IBM's sales in any given quarter, was gurgling and burbling along in the first quarter of 2008, helping to float the company's product sales and delivering pretty hefty overall revenue and profit increases considering the shaky nature of the economy in the United States. And lucky for Big Blue, three-quarters of its revenues come from outside the United States, which means the weak dollar amplifies overseas sales when they are brought back to IBM HQ.

Look at how much the weak dollar helps. Sales across all product and services lines for IBM rose by 11 percent to $24.5 billion in the first quarter of 2008, but if measured in their local currencies where the deals actually got done and booked in IBM's various units, sales would have only been up 4 percent compared to sales in the first quarter of 2007. Gross profits for the quarter rose by 14.7 percent to $10.2 billion, and net income rose by 25.7 percent to $2.3 billion. That works out to $1.65 per share, up 36.4 percent compared to net earnings per share in the first quarter of 2007, which was bolstered by IBM's ongoing and aggressive share buybacks. The $4.9 billion acquisition of business intelligence software maker Cognos and those share buybacks emptied IBM's cash coffers a bit, with cash down to $12 billion from the $16.1 billion the company had in the bank at the end of 2007. IBM expects to spend $12 billion this year on stocks, and cash flow from operations was sufficient to handle most of the stock buybacks in the first quarter.

IBM's president, chief executive officer, and chairman, Sam Palmisano, made his customary appearance in the press release announcing the financial results but was, as usual, nowhere near the conference call that Mark Loughridge, the company's chief financial officer, held with Wall Street analysts after the market closed on Wednesday.

"IBM had a very good quarter and a good start to 2008," Palmisano explained in the release. "These results reinforce our confidence in IBM's ability to perform well in a dynamic global economy. Our performance is a tribute to the way we have repositioned our company over the past several years, as well as the hard work of IBMers across the globe. IBM is a different company today, with a number of unique advantages: our global reach and scale, our strength in profitable growth segments, strong recurring revenue and profit streams, products and services that create real value for clients, and the discipline and financial strength and flexibility that enables us to adjust our business model as conditions require. We feel good about the rest of the year."

It remains to be seen if the rest of us out there in the world do, but apparently there are enough good vibes among the 6,000 top global companies that drive IBM's businesses and the several hundred thousand smaller companies that make up the foundation of IBM's reseller channel sales for Palmisano and his peers at those companies to be optimistic. Here's to hoping that the optimism spreads . . . .

While IBM positions itself as a services and software company, the reality is and will continue to be that its mainframe, Unix, i5/OS, Linux, and Windows systems drive a substantial portion of its business, including hardware, software, and services components. If you wanted to be fair, IBM should include operating system and middleware sales relating to its own platforms with those platforms, but because IBM wants to be thought of as a software player like Microsoft and Oracle (which it most certainly is), the company breaks the software that only runs on its own hardware to make Software Group look good. Ditto for services. A lot of what Global Services does today for a fee is the kind of things IBM used to provide for free when machinery was orders of magnitude more expensive per unit of performance than it is today. And that is why a discussion of IBM's systems business is always an important starting point for any discussion of any quarter of sales at Big Blue.

Loughridge said in the call that the Systems and Technology Group, which makes servers and storage as well as PowerPC and Power chips and other stuff sold on an OEM basis to other suppliers, saw sales fall by 6.7 percent in the quarter, to $4.2 billion, but added that excluding IBM's divested Printing Systems Division, which it sold to Ricoh last year, sales were only off 2 percent. Of course, that decrease was despite a rather large amplifier effect from exchange rates to U.S. dollars as IBM brought the money home to Armonk, New York. Even though the new System z10 machines, announced on January 29, were only available for 34 days in the first quarter, System z mainframe sales managed a 10 percent revenue growth (2 percent at constant currency), which suggests these boxes sold well outside of the United States and that IBM will probably have a pretty good upgrade cycle this year for mainframes. MIPS shipments were up 14 percent in the quarter.

IBM has not yet copped to its own Power Systems rebranding in its financial reporting, and seems to be stuck in between categorizations in its financial reporting. Loughridge made some silly statement about how the convergence of the System p and System i lines into Power Systems would now give customers all this new hardware, as if they had never been in synch with IBM's Power processors in the past. The reality is that a converged product line should mean lower prices for i5/OS workloads, and while this will hamper sales, it should allow more revenue opportunities. Loughridge could have explained that, but didn't. In fact, when questioned later in the call to give a little more detail on the various server products, Loughridge forgot to mention the System i at all.

The so-called Legacy System i business, by which IBM means non-Power6 machines sold before the lines were converged formally, took a big hit, with sales down 21 percent (down 27 percent at constant currency). This revenue decline is probably due in large measure to the substantial price cuts that the user-priced System i 515 and 525 servers had compared to earlier machines and to the expectation that IBM would deliver entry Power6-based servers running i5/OS V6R1 (now called i 6.1) early in 2008. The so-called Converged System p business, which means all of System p products as well as the Power6-based System i 570 that sold pretty well in the quarter. Even with the addition of the high-end of the System i business, this Converged System p category only had 2 percent revenue growth as reported, and declined 3 percent in constant currency. The high-end of the Power Systems lineup was soft, since everyone was expecting the Power 595 refresh with the Power6 processors, but sales of 570-class machines rose by 59 percent in the quarter, including the i5/OS contribution to the cause.

System x sales (weren't these rebranded as Modular Systems?) disappointed IBM in one way, with sales flat (down 6 percent in constant currency), but Loughridge said that given the commodity nature of these products, the decline had no material effect on IBM's profits. Storage System sales rose by 10 percent, with high-end DS8000 array sales up 17 percent and tape up 18 percent. Overall disk sales were up by a muted 6 percent. OEM technology sales fell by 16 percent, to $696 million. (This is one of the few areas where IBM gives a precise number for an element of STG sales.)

Global Services, as usual, made up the majority of IBM's sales, and Loughridge said that like in past quarters, IBM was seeing a shift to short-term engagements where the payoff was quick in services engagements. Global Services accounted for $14.6 billion in sales, up 17.3 percent. IBM breaks Global Services into two pieces these days to make the numbers look smaller. Global Technology Services accounted for $9.7 billion in sales (which means outsourcing, systems integration, and maintenance services), which Global Business Services (which means business process reengineering and other witchcraft services that are much harder to describe but which companies love to buy) accounted to $4.9 billion in sales. Both elements of services grew at the same rate, more or less. IBM had $12.6 billion in new services contract signings in the first quarter, up 6 percent, and the services backlog stands at around $118 billion.

On the software front, IBM's Software Group kept plugging along, showing real growth as it has done quarter after quarter for a long time. Software Group posted sales of $4.8 billion, up 14 percent as reported (but only 6 percent at constant currency). The key branded middleware--DB2, Lotus, Rational, Tivoli, and WebSphere--accounted for 53 percent of sales in the quarter, or $2.54 billion. WebSphere middleware and tool sales rose by 20 percent, while database and related information management sales were up 27 percent (boosted by Cognos) and Lotus/Domino groupware and middleware rose by 17 percent. Tivoli systems management and security sales were up by 9 percent, and Rational development tools rose by a mere 3 percent. Other middleware--meaning things like CICS, VSAM and stuff that runs on IBM's System i gear, accounted for $1.15 billion in sales in the quarter. Operating systems brought in $528 million in sales, and other software accounted for $576 million.

Loughridge said that sales in the United States was stronger than expected, but added that IBM was not expecting to do any more than pursue opportunities to help customers improve their IT infrastructure or cut costs. He said that the emerging markets, such as China and India, were like a "gold rush" and that IBM was deploying resources to chase opportunities there and catch as much of the growth as it could. IBM had $9.9 billion in sales in the Americas region during the first quarter, up 8 percent as reported (6 percent when adjusting for currencies), while sales in Europe, the Middle East, and Africa rose by 16 percent (only 4 percent at constant currency) to $8.8 billion. The Asia/Pacific region grew by 14 percent to $5.1 billion, but was only up 3 percent in local currencies. This suggests that the gold rush is as much the result of a crashing dollar and a strong rupee and yuan as anything else. But just don't tell Wall Street. They want to drink the blue Kool-aid.


RELATED STORIES

Weak Dollar, Services, and Power6 Give IBM a Solid Fourth Quarter

IBM Gives Wall Street a Present: More Profits Than Expected

IBM Hit by Financial Services Slowdown in Q3

System i Sales Drop Again in Q3, IBM Says Little

Shearer Talks About System i Sales, Server Reorganization

IBM Turns In Its Best Second Quarter in Six Years

Slowing U.S. Sales Hurt IBM's First Quarter

Merrill Lynch Takes a Closer Look at IBM's Server Sales in Q1



                     Post this story to del.icio.us
               Post this story to Digg
    Post this story to Slashdot


Sponsored By
nuBRIDGES

The best secure FTP software
is just one click away!

Whether you need a server or
just a client, nuBridges offers leading
software built specifically for System i.

Get the security you need
and the features you want
from the company that's been trusted
by thousands of users
on the 400 platform since 1996.

Click here to learn more.


Editors: Dan Burger, Timothy Prickett Morgan, Alex Woodie
Publisher and Advertising Director: Jenny Delroy
Advertising Sales Representative: Kim Reed
Contact the Editors: To contact anyone on the IT Jungle Team
Go to our contacts page and send us a message.

Sponsored Links

COMMON:  Join us at the annual 2009 conference, April 26 - April 30, in Reno, Nevada
LANSA:  It's Time for 4 days of education at the LANSA User Conference, May 4 – 7, in Orlando
Camp Help/Systems:  Explore operations automation and BI, June 17 - 20, 2008, Minneapolis, MN

 

 

IT Jungle Store Top Book Picks

Getting Started with PHP for i5/OS: List Price, $59.95
The System i RPG & RPG IV Tutorial and Lab Exercises: List Price, $59.95
The System i Pocket RPG & RPG IV Guide: List Price, $69.95
The iSeries Pocket Database Guide: List Price, $59.00
The iSeries Pocket Developers' Guide: List Price, $59.00
The iSeries Pocket SQL Guide: List Price, $59.00
The iSeries Pocket Query Guide: List Price, $49.00
The iSeries Pocket WebFacing Primer: List Price, $39.00
Migrating to WebSphere Express for iSeries: List Price, $49.00
iSeries Express Web Implementer's Guide: List Price, $59.00
Getting Started with WebSphere Development Studio for iSeries: List Price, $79.95
Getting Started With WebSphere Development Studio Client for iSeries: List Price, $89.00
Getting Started with WebSphere Express for iSeries: List Price, $49.00
WebFacing Application Design and Development Guide: List Price, $55.00
Can the AS/400 Survive IBM?: List Price, $49.00
The All-Everything Machine: List Price, $29.95
Chip Wars: List Price, $29.95


 
The Four Hundred
The 64-Core Power6-Based Power 595 Starts to Roll in May

And Then There Was One: The New and Improved Power 570

Sundry Power Systems Announcements

As I See It: Goldilocks and the Zen of IT

Albert Simon Barsa, Jr., 1953-2008

The Linux Beacon
ScaleMP Makes Big SMPs Out of Little Ones

VIA Creates Compact Thin Server, Pushes Linux

Windows and Linux Get a Skinny Blade Server from IBM

The 64-Core Power6-Based Power 595 Starts to Roll in May

And Then There Was One: The New and Improved Power 570

Four Hundred Stuff
i-Based SCS500 Internet Phone System Now Available

Raz-Lee Flushes Out Fraud with Application Security Tool

ARCAD Looks to Aid Application Modernization Projects with Updated Software

BOSaNOVA Goes Semi-Rugged with New Thin Client

Quadrant Updates IntelliChief with Web Forms

Big Iron
HP Goes Visual with Application Modernization Tools

Top Mainframe Stories From Around the Web

Chats, Webinars, Seminars, Shows, and Other Happenings

Four Hundred Guru
More about SQL and Logical Files

Performance Advice from a Mysterious Friend, Part 5

Admin Alert: V6R1 Changes for the i5/OS Administrator, Part 2

System i PTF Guide
April 12, 2008: Volume 10, Number 15

April 5, 2008: Volume 10, Number 14

March 29, 2008: Volume 10, Number 13

March 22, 2008: Volume 10, Number 12

March 15, 2008: Volume 10, Number 11

March 8, 2008: Volume 10, Number 10

The Windows Observer
Will Bloat and Complexity Get the Best of Windows? Probably Not

More Wheeling, But No Dealing in Micro-Hoo

Microsoft Unveils New Security Vision as 'Stirling' Goes to Beta

As I See It: Misera Plebs Contribuens

Windows and Linux Get a Skinny Blade Server from IBM

The Unix Guardian
The 64-Core Power6-Based Power 595 Starts to Roll in May

HP Rejiggers HP-UX 11i Packaging as Update 2 Ships

Sun Gangs Up Sparc T2+ Chips with Maramba Servers

The Power 575: Grandfather of the Multi-Teraflops Power7 Monster

Most CIOs Say 2008 IT Budgets Are Stable, So Far

Four Hundred Monitor
Four Hundred Monitor's
Full iSeries Events Calendar

BACK ISSUES

Breaking News

Printer Friendly Version





 
Subscription Information:
You can unsubscribe, change your email address, or sign up for any of IT Jungle's free e-newsletters through our Web site at http://www.itjungle.com/sub/subscribe.html.

Copyright © 1996-2008 Guild Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Guild Companies, Inc., 50 Park Terrace East, Suite 8F, New York, NY 10034

Privacy Statement