IBM, the world's biggest computer-services company, last night said quarterly profit rose 22 per cent on lower costs and strong sales of advanced microprocessors for video game machines.
The results beat consensus forecasts from analysts and the company said it expected 2006 earnings to be "consistent" with analysts' estimates. IBM shares rose 1.4 per cent in after-hours trade following the earnings report.
"It looked like a solid quarter," said Chris Whitmore, an analyst at Deutsche Bank Securities who has a "buy" rating on the stock. "Revenues came in slightly ahead of consensus."
"EPS were also a few pennies above expectations and they reported a solid bookings number in the services business, so the initial take looks positive."
Expenses fell 9.5 per cent after International Business Machines Corp. cut about 15,000 jobs last year and set out on a strategy to focus on higher-profit businesses, such as consulting, outsourcing, business software and high-end microprocessors.
In 2005, IBM sold its unprofitable PC business to China's Lenovo Group Ltd. and in 2002 sold its disk-drive business to Hitachi Ltd.
IBM said first-quarter net income rose to $1.71 billion, or $1.08 per share, from $1.4 billion, or 84 cents per share, a year earlier. Revenue fell to $20.7 billion from $22.9 billion, mainly reflecting the sale of its PC business.
Revenue was slightly better than the average forecast of $20.6 billion.
"Given our start to the year, we are on track to deliver EPS growth in line with the IBM model," chief financial officer Mark Loughridge said on a conference call with analysts, implying a double-digit percentage increase. "This is consistent with the average of your estimates for the year."
Mr Loughridge said he was "quite confident" about the rest of the year. Analysts saw 2006 earnings per share at $5.81 and revenue of $90.6 billion, according to Reuters Estimates. That compared with net income of $4.91 per share in 2005.