CIMdata PLM Industry Summary Online Archive

17 October 2005

Financial News

IBM Reports 2005 Third-Quarter Results

IBM announced third- quarter 2005 diluted earnings per common share of $.94 from continuing operations, including 32 cents per share for a one-time charge of $525 million for taxes in connection with the planned repatriation of foreign earnings. Diluted earnings per share for the third-quarter 2005 were $1.26, excluding this one-time charge. Diluted earnings in the third quarter of 2004 were $.92 per share, including 11 cents per share for a one-time, pre-tax charge of $320 million for a partial settlement of legal claims against IBM's pension plan. Excluding these non-recurring items, diluted earnings per share of $1.26 in the third-quarter 2005 increased 23 cents, or 22 percent over the diluted earnings per share of $1.03 in the year-ago quarter.

Third-quarter income from continuing operations was $1.5 billion, including the one-time charge for taxes associated with the planned repatriation of foreign earnings under the provision of the American Jobs Creation Act of 2004 ("Homeland"). This compares with $1.6 billion in the third quarter of 2004, which includes the one-time, pre-tax charge for the legal settlement related to the pension plan. Without the one-time charges, income from continuing operations of $2.0 billion in the third quarter of 2005 increased $292 million, or 17 percent versus the comparable period last year.

Total revenues for the third quarter of 2005 of $21.5 billion decreased 8 percent (8 percent, adjusting for currency) from the third quarter of 2004, which includes revenue from the divested PC business. Excluding the PC revenue, revenues increased 4 percent (4 percent, adjusting for currency) compared with the third quarter of 2004.

Samuel J. Palmisano, IBM chairman and chief executive officer, said: "IBM had a good quarter. It showed the strength of our business model across hardware, software and services, and we continued to see the benefit of the strategic transitions that we've implemented in past quarters. Our restructuring actions and our streamlined management in Europe are starting to yield results. We saw excellent earnings-per- share improvement this quarter, and many of the businesses that are central to our strategy-including middleware, midrange servers, and Business Performance Transformation Services, especially in our Engineering and Technology Services-performed well, especially in emerging markets around the world. We are encouraged by the client reaction to the new zSeries mainframe, and IBM is well positioned in our microelectronics business as the game console industry moves to its next generation of products. Our clients are leveraging IBM's unique ability to apply innovative, high-value skills and solutions to transform their businesses and industries."

Third-quarter revenue growth was 4 percent (4 percent, adjusting for currency) excluding the divested PC business. In the Americas, third-quarter revenues were $9.6 billion, down 5 percent as reported (up 5 percent, adjusting for currency and PCs) from the 2004 period. Revenues from Europe/Middle East/Africa were $6.9 billion, down 6 percent (up 5 percent, adjusting for currency and PCs). Asia-Pacific revenues decreased 17 percent (2 percent, adjusting for currency and PCs) to $4.3 billion. OEM revenues were $814 million, up 12 percent compared with the 2004 third quarter.

Without the PC business, revenues increased in three of IBM's five key industry sales units in the third-quarter 2005 led by good growth in the Public and Distribution sectors, as well as in sales to Small and Medium Businesses. IBM's revenues for Business Performance Transformation Services grew over 35 percent in the quarter (and are up over 30 percent year to date).

Revenues from Global Services, including maintenance, increased 3 percent (3 percent, adjusting for currency) to $11.7 billion in the third quarter. IBM signed services contracts totaling $11.0 billion and ended the quarter with an estimated services backlog, including Strategic Outsourcing, Business Consulting Services, Integrated Technology Services and Maintenance, of $113 billion, an increase of $3 billion from a year ago.

Hardware revenues decreased 32 percent (33 percent, adjusting for currency) to $5.1 billion in the third-quarter 2005 compared to $7.5 billion in the year-ago period, which includes revenue from the divested PC business. Hardware revenues without the PC business increased 7 percent (6 percent, adjusting for currency).

Hardware revenues for the Systems and Technology Group totaled $5.0 billion for the quarter, up 7 percent. Revenue growth from S&TG eServer products was driven by iSeries midrange servers, which increased 25 percent; pSeries UNIX servers, an increase of 15 percent; and xSeries servers, which increased 11 percent. Revenues from the zSeries mainframe product decreased 4 percent compared with the year-ago period. Total delivery of zSeries computing power, which is measured in MIPS (millions of instructions per second), increased 18 percent. In addition to eServers, revenues from Storage Systems and Microelectronics increased 11 percent and 14 percent, respectively.

Revenues from Software were $3.8 billion, an increase of 5 percent (5 percent, adjusting for currency) compared with the third quarter of 2004. Revenues from IBM's middleware brands, which include WebSphere, DB2, Tivoli, Lotus and Rational products, were $3.0 billion, up 6 percent versus the third quarter of 2004. Operating systems revenues decreased 2 percent to $588 million compared with the prior-year quarter.

For the WebSphere family of software products, which facilitate customers' ability to manage a wide variety of business processes using open standards to interconnect applications, data and operating systems, revenues increased 14 percent. Revenues for Information Management software increased 10 percent with revenue growth of 4 percent in the DB2 database family of software offerings, which enables clients to leverage information on demand. Revenues from Tivoli software, infrastructure software that enables customers to centrally manage networks and storage, increased 8 percent, and revenues for Lotus software, which allows collaborating and messaging by customers in real- time communication and knowledge management, increased 12 percent. Revenues from Rational software, integrated tools to improve the processes of software development, increased 12 percent compared with the year-ago quarter.

As a result, IBM expects to gain market share for the third quarter in the collaborative software, systems management and security software, Web services and data management categories.

Global Financing revenues declined 6 percent (7 percent, adjusting for currency) in the third quarter to $600 million. Revenues from the Enterprise Investments/Other area, which includes industry-specific IT solutions such as product life-cycle management software, increased 9 percent (9 percent, adjusting for currency) to $302 million versus the prior-year third quarter.

The company's total gross profit margin was 40.6 percent in the 2005 third quarter compared with 36.5 percent in the 2004 period, which includes the divested PC business. Excluding the PC business, the third- quarter 2004 gross profit margin was 40.0 percent versus the 40.6 percent in the current-year quarter.

Total expense and other income decreased 8 percent to $5.8 billion, or 3 percent without the prior-year charge of $320 million for the legal settlement. SG&A expense of $4.6 billion decreased 10 percent year over year. Excluding the prior-year legal settlement charge, SG&A expense decreased 4 percent principally as a result of the sale of the PC business. RD&E expense was $1.45 billion compared with $1.47 billion in the year-ago period. Intellectual property and custom development income decreased to $213 million compared with $259 million a year ago. Other (income) and expense was $99 million of income in the third quarter of 2005, versus $55 million of income in the same period last year.

IBM's effective tax rate in the third-quarter 2005 was 48.0 percent, compared with 28.8 percent in the third quarter of 2004. Substantially all of the tax rate increase is due to the incremental tax charge of $525 million in connection with the planned repatriation of foreign earnings in the current-year quarter and the tax impact associated with the legal settlement in the prior-year quarter. Excluding these one-time items, the third-quarter 2005 tax rate was 30.0 percent compared with 30.1 percent in the year-ago quarter.

Share repurchases totaled approximately $1.7 billion in the third quarter. The weighted-average number of diluted common shares outstanding in the third-quarter 2005 was 1.62 billion compared with 1.70 billion shares in the same period of 2004. As of September 30, 2005, there were 1.58 billion basic common shares outstanding.

IBM ended the third quarter of 2005 with $8.3 billion of cash on hand. The balance sheet remains strong, and the company is well positioned to take advantage of opportunities.

Debt, including Global Financing, totaled $21.4 billion, compared with $22.9 billion at year-end 2004. From a management segment view, the non-global financing debt-to-capitalization ratio was 3.1 percent at the end of September 30, 2005, and Global Financing debt declined $1.8 billion from year-end 2004 to a total of $20.5 billion, resulting in a debt-to-equity ratio of 6.8 to 1.

Year-To-Date 2005 Results

Income from continuing operations for the nine months ended September 30, 2005 was $4.8 billion compared with $4.7 billion for the same period of 2004, including the following non-recurring items in the respective periods:

   --   Year-to-date 2005:

       -   charge of $525 million for taxes in connection with the

          planned repatriation of foreign earnings,

       -   incremental pre-tax charges of $1.7 billion for

          restructuring,

       -   gain of $1.1 billion before tax on the sale of the PC

          business,

       -   other income of $775 million before tax due to a settlement

          agreement entered into with Microsoft.

 

   --   Year-to-date 2004:

       -   pre-tax charge of $320 million for the partial settlement of

          legal claims against IBM's pension plan.

Diluted earnings per share from continuing operations for nine months of 2005 were $2.92 compared with $2.72 per diluted share for the 2004 period. Excluding these non-recurring items from both periods, diluted earnings per share were $3.22 compared with diluted earnings per share of $2.83 for the 2004 period, an increase of 14 percent. Revenues from continuing operations for the nine-month period, which includes PC revenues of $2.9 billion for the first four months of 2005 only, totaled $66.7 billion, down 3 percent (5 percent, adjusting for currency) compared with $68.6 billion for the nine months of 2004. Without the revenues from the divested PC business, revenues totaled $63.8 billion, up 5 percent (3 percent, adjusting for currency) compared with the nine- month period of 2004.

For total operations, net income for the first nine months of 2005, including a loss from discontinued operations of $27 million, was $4.75 billion, or $2.90 per diluted share, compared with the nine months of 2004 net income of $4.65 billion, or $2.72 per diluted share, which included a loss from discontinued operations of $3 million.

The rationale for management's use of non-GAAP measures is included as part of the supplementary materials presented within the third- quarter earnings materials. These materials are available on the IBM investor relations Web site at http://www.ibm.com/investor and will be included in a subsequent Form 8-K.

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