IBM preliminary profit beats estimates

Mon Jan 14, 2008 10:56pm GMT
 
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By Sinead Carew and Tiffany Wu

NEW YORK (Reuters) - IBM (IBM.N) reported a better- than-expected 24 percent rise in preliminary quarterly earnings on Monday on strong sales in overseas markets, driving its shares up 5 percent and spurring a broader tech rally.

The surprise report ahead of International Business Machines Corp's scheduled earnings release on Thursday eased some concerns about how much the slowing U.S. economy has hurt the world's largest technology services company.

IBM said 6 percentage points of its 10 percent revenue increase in the fourth quarter were due to currency benefits as the dollar weakened.

"We think IBM saw fundamental upside from most of its operating segments, though much of the December quarter upside was driven by the strength of its international end-markets," Goldman Sachs analysts said in an investor note.

IBM's report boosted the Dow Jones Industrial Average and the Nasdaq, following a dismal start to the year on concerns the United States may be heading into a recession.

While analysts said concerns remained about the strength of U.S. corporate demand, IBM's news spurred gains in other tech shares such as Intel Corp (INTC.O), which is due to report results on Tuesday and whose shares rose 4.96 percent.

The U.S. shares of another tech bellwether, German software maker SAP AG (SAPG.DE), rose 4.21 percent after it also posted solid quarterly results. Analysts said investors were relieved SAP did not repeat last year's disappointing earnings report.

IBM said fourth-quarter earnings from continuing operations rose to $2.80 a share from $2.26 a share a year ago. That beat by 20 cents the average Wall Street forecast for earnings of $2.60 per share, according to Reuters Estimates.  Continued...

 
A share trader is pictured behind a mock one dollar bill and a mock 500 Euro note symbolizing a consumer credit note, at the German stock exchange in Frankfurt, December 18, 2008. REUTERS/Kai Pfaffenbach
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