• The Four Hundred
  • Subscribe
  • Media Kit
  • Contributors
  • About Us
  • Contact
Menu
  • The Four Hundred
  • Subscribe
  • Media Kit
  • Contributors
  • About Us
  • Contact
  • Arrow and Agilysys Cite Weakness in Proprietary Server Sales

    November 13, 2006 Timothy Prickett Morgan

    Two of the biggest master distributors of IBM‘s servers, Arrow Electronics and Agilysys, have turned in their financial report cards for the three months ended September 30, and as you might expect, both companies cited weakness in the sale of proprietary servers–meaning mostly System i5 products and some mainframes.

    Arrow, of course, has a vast distribution business, including electronic components as well as IT gear (much like rival Avnet, the other “A” of the three A-named companies who are master resellers of the System i platforms. During the third quarter, Arrow had revenues of $3.45 billion, up 27 percent, and a net income of $85.9 million, up 35 percent. Computer products sales rose by 22 percent in the third quarter, but operating income was only up 8 percent. Sales within the Enterprise Computing Solutions business–which distributes storage and servers to resellers–increased 7 percent. “Our enterprise computing business continued to demonstrate strong profitability and returns,” explained William Mitchell, Arrow’s chairman, president, and chief executive officer. “Growth was driven by strong performance in storage and industry standard servers in North America, and software in our European enterprise business.”

    But looking ahead, Paul Reilly, chief financial officer at Arrow, said that the company expected overall sales of between $3.425 billion and $3.625 billion in the fourth quarter. “We anticipate continued growth in storage, security and infrastructure software, and industry standard servers while we expect the traditional seasonal growth in our enterprise business to be tempered by the continued weakness in the proprietary server market, resulting in worldwide computer products sales between $750 and $825 million,” Reilly said.

    There’s that “P” word again, which many people at IBM hate and which Microsoft should have applied to its Windows platform, too.

    Agilysys is more focused on reselling servers and storage, particularly through its KeyLink Systems Group, but it does provide services and various IT solutions (rather than just raw IT gear for resellers) directly to customers through its Enterprise Solutions Group. In any event, in its fiscal second quarter, Agilysys saw sales decline by 5 percent to $385 million. The company said that sales were down $9.8 million in the KeyLink Systems Group, and that sales in the Enterprise Systems Group dropped by $10.3 million compared to the year-ago quarter. Hardware sales across all units fell by $19.1 million, or 6 percent; software sales were off 1.7 percent and services sales were down 5.9 percent. (The company did not provide absolute revenue figures for these categories, but if you do the math, then Agilysys had hardware sales of over $318 million in the quarter.)

    Agilysys said in its 10-Q filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission that the decline in its sales was “driven by a decline in hardware sales, principally proprietary servers and storage technology.”

    Share this:

    • Reddit
    • Facebook
    • LinkedIn
    • Twitter
    • Email

    Tags: Tags: mtfh_rc, Volume 15, Number 45 -- November 13, 2006

    Sponsored by
    DRV Tech

    Get More Out of Your IBM i

    With soaring costs, operational data is more critical than ever. IBM shops need faster, easier ways to distribute IBM applications-based data to users more efficiently, no matter where they are.

    The Problem:

    For Users, IBM Data Can Be Difficult to Get To

    IBM Applications generate reports as spooled files, originally designed to be printed. Often those reports are packed together with so much data it makes them difficult to read. Add to that hardcopy is a pain to distribute. User-friendly formats like Excel and PDF are better, offering sorting, searching, and easy portability but getting IBM reports into these formats can be tricky without the right tools.

    The Solution:

    IBM i Reports can easily be converted to easy to read and share formats like Excel and PDF and Delivered by Email

    Converting IBM i, iSeries, and AS400 reports into Excel and PDF is now a lot easier with SpoolFlex software by DRV Tech.  If you or your users are still doing this manually, think how much time is wasted dragging and reformatting to make a report readable. How much time would be saved if they were automatically formatted correctly and delivered to one or multiple recipients.

    SpoolFlex converts spooled files to Excel and PDF, automatically emailing them, and saving copies to network shared folders. SpoolFlex converts complex reports to Excel, removing unwanted headers, splitting large reports out for individual recipients, and delivering to users whether they are at the office or working from home.

    Watch our 2-minute video and see DRV’s powerful SpoolFlex software can solve your file conversion challenges.

    Watch Video

    DRV Tech

    www.drvtech.com

    866.378.3366

    Share this:

    • Reddit
    • Facebook
    • LinkedIn
    • Twitter
    • Email

    Admin Alert: The Rule of Fours for i5 Test Environments Create Database Files from SQL Queries

    Leave a Reply Cancel reply

TFH Volume: 15 Issue: 45

This Issue Sponsored By

    Table of Contents

    • Marywood University and IBM Team on System i Curricula Development
    • Online Backups Business Treating EVault Well
    • Power.org Organization Announces Merged Power Instruction Set Architecture
    • Arrow and Agilysys Cite Weakness in Proprietary Server Sales
    • IBM Lowers Interest Rates on Low Rate Financing Deal
    • Marywood University and IBM Team on System i Curricula Development
    • As I See It: The Workplace Politician
    • Interest in WDSc Indicates Small but Steady Change in App Dev
    • Power6 Ups the Ante for Virtualization, Power Management
    • Sirius Gets Equity Investment from Thoma Cressey

    Content archive

    • The Four Hundred
    • Four Hundred Stuff
    • Four Hundred Guru

    Recent Posts

    • The Power11 Transistor Count Discrepancies Explained – Sort Of
    • Is Your IBM i HA/DR Actually Tested – Or Just Installed?
    • Big Blue Delivers IBM i Customer Requests In ACS Update
    • New DbToo SDK Hooks RPG And Db2 For i To External Services
    • IBM i PTF Guide, Volume 27, Number 33
    • Tool Aims To Streamline Git Integration For Old School IBM i Devs
    • IBM To Add Full System Replication And FlashCopy To PowerHA
    • Guru: Decoding Base64 ASCII
    • The Price Tweaking Continues For Power Systems
    • IBM i PTF Guide, Volume 27, Numbers 31 And 32

    Subscribe

    To get news from IT Jungle sent to your inbox every week, subscribe to our newsletter.

    Pages

    • About Us
    • Contact
    • Contributors
    • Four Hundred Monitor
    • IBM i PTF Guide
    • Media Kit
    • Subscribe

    Search

    Copyright © 2025 IT Jungle