Wall Street Beat: Earnings, Spending Forecasts Highlight Tech Sector Strength
Economic uncertainty still casts a shadow on IT spending, however
Fri, February 10, 2012
IDG News Service — Recent market research reports and earnings this week from tech bellwethers including Lenovo and Cisco Systems underscore underlying strength in IT even as the global economy continues to experience significant turbulence.
The highest-profile vendor to report earnings this week, Cisco, impressed market watchers by delivering earnings and sales growth. Cisco's financial results suffered last year, with critics claiming that an unfocused product strategy allowed mainly Asian manufacturers to undercut the U.S.-based networking giant by offering low-cost, solid-quality gear, especially in emerging markets.
Cisco promised to make cuts and refocus its product strategy, and its earnings report this week appears to show the moves are starting to work.
"Cisco's overhaul seems to be paying off as it posted better-than-expected Q2 earnings and increased its quarterly dividend," according to a research note from Canaccord Genuity.
Cisco reported that net sales for its second fiscal quarter were up 10.8 percent year over year to US$11.5 billion, while earnings rose 43.5 percent to $2.2 billion.
Cisco is counting on its virtualization and cloud strategies to expand its offerings in the market for data centers, CEO John Chambers said in a conference call.
On the hardware front, Lenovo -- since the third quarter of last year the world's number-two PC maker behind Hewlett-Packard -- said that for its third fiscal quarter, profit rose 54 percent year over year to $153 million, while revenue jumped 44 percent to $8.4 billion. The China-based company ascribed its success in the quarter to strength in its home market and efforts to expand in emerging economies such as Russia and India.
The strong earnings reports were accompanied by a spate of upbeat market research. Research and Markets reported Friday that its latest Business Monitor International United States Consumer Electronics Report estimates that U.S. PC hardware sales for 2011 was $144.1 billion, and that the compound average growth rate for the 2012-2016 period will be about 3.4 percent, a little higher than previous expectations as multimedia and entertainment notebooks remain buoyant.
"In 2011, sales of consumer electronics products such as smartphones and LED-backlit TV sets grew strongly as the recovery gathered traction," the report said.
Meanwhile, though declining to cite specific figures, the Semiconductor Industry Association said on Monday that the global semiconductor market is showing signs of healthy growth. The SIA expects a recovery in global demand after the March 2011 earthquake in Japan disrupted production and supply chains last year.
Figures from a recent survey of IT decision makers conducted by CDW IT Monitor appear to reinforce the sense of optimism. Overall, 80 percent of corporate IT decision-makers polled anticipate an increase in hardware spending in the next six months, an increase of five percentage points since October, CDW said. It added that software demand, as recorded in its survey, rebounded to reach record levels -- producing 10, eight and six percentage point increases in anticipated spending among small, medium and large-size businesses, respectively.


