HP Reports Lower Earnings, Revenue

Aug 26, 2016

PC sales stabilize, although printer segment remains weak

HP says revenue from toner and ink supplies fell 18% in the latest quarter, while printing hardware unit sales slid 10%.
HP says revenue from toner and ink supplies fell 18% in the latest quarter, while printing hardware unit sales slid 10%. PHOTO:ASSOCIATED PRESS

 

HP Inc.’s revenue and earnings shrank in its most recent quarter, but the company showed signs of stabilizing its declining personal-computer business, its largest revenue generator.

The Palo Alto, Calif.-based company said its personal-systems revenue was flat in the latest quarter after five quarters of declines, with unit PC sales up 4%. Revenue fell 14% in its printing business—which generates most of HP’s profits—reflecting greater use of email and file sharing rather than printing documents.

Shares fell 5.4% to $13.63 in after-hours trading on a profit outlook for the current quarter that was below analysts’ expectations.

HP pointed to signs of improvement in the printer business, and the company’s overall revenue and profit topped analyst expectations.

Dion Weisler, HP’s chief executive, said he was “incredibly pleased” with the progress made in the quarter.

HP became independent last year as part of the breakup of the former Hewlett-Packard Co. While HP’s two major businesses have failed to grow, its stock is up more than 21% in 2016 because of its steady flow of cash, much of which it uses for dividends and stock buybacks.

The company generated $1 billion in free cash flow in the third quarter, putting it on target to generate between $2 billion and $2.3 billion in free cash flow for the fiscal year ending in October.

“It’s almost in the bag,” said Cathie Lesjak, HP’s chief financial officer.

The No. 2 PC maker behind Lenovo Group Ltd., HP has suffered along with rivals as consumer spending has shifted to products such as smartphones. But market researchers recently concluded that the rate of decline had moderated in the second quarter.

International Data Corp. in July estimated HP’s quarterly PC shipments rose 5.1% over a year ago, though the overall PC market fell 4.5%. Mr. Weisler has driven the company tofocus on faster-growing parts of the market that command higher margins, such as gaming PCs and premium notebook models.

He said Wednesday that the strategy is paying off, as HP gained market share and average sales prices for consumer PCs rose in the latest quarter.

The numbers are less rosy on the printer side. HP on Wednesday said revenue from toner and ink supplies fell 18%, while printing hardware unit sales slid 10%.

Another factor affecting HP’s printer results was a decision to reduce inventory at its dealers and distributors. Mr. Weisler in June announced a strategy shift aimed atreducing distributor inventories and moving away from using periodic promotions to drive demand.

HP at the time predicted printing supplies revenue would go down by about $225 million in each of its third and fourth quarters because of the reduction of inventory in its distribution channels. But it predicted that much of the revenue reduction would be offset by proceeds from the deal to sell some software assets to OpenText Corp.

Amit Daryanani, a RBC Capital Markets analyst, called the third-quarter results solid but the current quarter’s outlook “much softer” than expected.

“Management is taking a very cautious approach to its forecast,” added Bill Kreher, an analyst at Edward Jones.

Ms. Lesjak said the fourth-quarter outlook largely reflects the timing of costs associated with the shifts in its printing-supplies strategy. But she and Mr. Weisler also said price competition remains tough in PCs and printing.

HP’s earnings for the three months ended July 31 declined 8% to $783 million, or 45 cents a share, from the $854 million, or 47 cents a share, in the same period a year earlier.

Revenue fell 4% to $11.89 billion.

For its current quarter, HP said it expects to report adjusted per-share earnings of between 34 cents and 37 cents. Analysts’ average estimate called for earnings of 41 cents a share, according to Thomson Reuters. HP didn’t provide a revenue projection.

On an adjusted basis that excludes one-time items, HP said earnings per share were 48 cents. In June, it forecast per-share earnings on that same basis of between 43 cents and 46 cents. Analysts polled by Thomson Reuters had projected, on average, 44 cents a share in earnings on revenue of $11.4 billion.

For its fiscal-year, HP projected adjusted profit per share of between $1.59 and $1.62. It had previously projected a range of $1.59 to $1.65 a share.

Source: WSJ


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