Ethan Miller, Getty Imaegs
IBM chair, president and CEO Ginni Rommety prepares to deliver a keynote address at CES in Las Vegas.
IBM chair, president and CEO Ginni Rommety prepares to deliver a keynote address at CES in Las Vegas.
IBM chair, president and CEO Ginni Rommety prepares to deliver a keynote address at CES in Las Vegas.
IBM chair, president and CEO Ginni Rommety prepares to deliver a keynote address at CES in Las Vegas.
IBM chair, president and CEO Ginni Rommety prepares to deliver a keynote address at CES in Las Vegas.

IBM Gains Most in a Decade After Surprisingly Positive Results

Jan. 23, 2019
Traditional markets outpaced newer offerings in the cloud and artificial intelligence.

International Business Machines Corp. shares rose the most in a decade after the company gave a positive forecast for 2019 and fourth-quarter results beat analysts’ estimates, led by its business that helps companies and governments manage their technology.

Chief Executive Officer Ginni Rometty has been touting IBM’s newer offerings in the cloud and artificial intelligence as agents for growth. But in the past year, increases have come from more traditional markets instead. IBM’s consulting business flipped from declines into growth in the period ended Dec. 31, with revenue gaining 4% to $4.3 billion in the Global Business Services unit from the period a year earlier.

Gains in that unit surprised the market, Bloomberg Intelligence analyst Anurag Rana said in an interview on Bloomberg Television, and suggests enterprise technology spending is “very strong right now."

The shares surged as much as 10%, the most intraday since January 2009, to $135 in New York Wednesday. They had been down 25% in the past 12 months through Tuesday’s close, before the results were released.

IBM’s revenue for the fourth quarter was $21.8 billion, beating the average analyst forecast of $21.7 billion. Earnings were $4.87 a share, also beating analysts’ forecasts. IBM said it sees adjusted earnings per share of at least $13.90 in 2019. Analysts had predicted $13.89.

That was IBM’s “cleanest quarter in years,” Morgan Stanley analysts, including Katy Huberty, wrote in a note to investors. The company’s services transformation was also “bearing fruit," Huberty wrote, as total services revenue grew 2%. Morgan Stanley raised its estimates for this year’s earnings-per-share.

Still, IBM has much to prove to some investors waiting to see the fruits of a multi-year turnaround plan. After six years of revenue declines, IBM showed two consecutive quarters of growth in the first half of 2018. However, those were largely due to its legacy mainframes, the massive computers that help power global financial transactions and other complicated calculations for businesses and governments.

Revenue from cloud-based offerings grew about 12% to $19.2 billion in 2018, but that’s about half the growth rate of last year. IBM agreed to buy software maker Red Hat Inc. for $33 billion in October to jump-start its efforts to catch up in the cloud. Rometty called the purchase “a game changer” for IBM.

“While IBM delivered a decent quarter relative to expectations, we still have reservations about the future growth prospects for the company,” Josh Olson, an analyst with Edward Jones & Co., said in a note.

Revenue generated by the company’s systems unit, which includes hardware and operating systems software, declined 21 percent in the fourth quarter to $2.6 billion. Technology services and cloud platforms sales fell 2.9% to $8.9 billion while Cognitive Solutions, which includes artificial intelligence and analytics software, reported revenue of $5.46 billion, little changed from the period a year earlier.

IBM also announced a win for its cloud business. The company signed a major extension of its agreement to sell IT services to French bank BNP Paribas SA. The eight-year deal is worth about $2 billion to the company, according to a source familiar with the agreement.

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