HP revenue drops on weak enterprise demand

Sales fell by more than 2% in the fourth quarter to $28.41bn, from $29.13bn a year earlier

HP said last month it would split into two listed companies next year, separating its computer and printer businesses from its faster-growing corporate hardware and services operations
HP said last month it would split into two listed companies next year, separating its computer and printer businesses from its faster-growing corporate hardware and services operations

Hewlett-Packard said its quarterly revenue fell in almost every business segment over the year, highlighting weaknesses ahead of the company’s planned 2015 separation of its enterprise services from its traditional computer and printing units.

Sales fell 2.5 per cent in the fourth quarter to $28.41 billion, from $29.13 billion a year earlier, HP said. Analysts had expected $28.76 billion.

Profit declined 2.7 per cent to $2.01 billion, or $1.06 cents a share, compared with $1.01 cents a share a year ago, in line with analysts’ expectations.

On a more traditional accounting basis, profit declined 5.7 pe rcent to $1.33 billion, or 70 cents a share, compared with 73 cents a share a year ago.

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"I've always said that turnarounds aren't linear," chief executive Meg Whitman told analysts on a conference call while highlighting HP's performance compared with three years ago, when she became CEO. "We're right where we thought we'd be."

The enterprise group and enterprise services, areas that Ms Whitman had previously flagged as growth drivers, showed revenue declines of 4 per cent and 7 per cent respectively.

On the call, Ms Whitman said she expected a slower decline in enterprise revenue next year. Enterprise services would be the biggest “swing factor” in the company’s 2015 growth projections, she said.

For next year, the company said it expects to earn $3.83 to $4.03 per share, up from $3.74 for 2014.

The company's personal computer division, its largest and most mature, grew by 4 percent after a 12 per cent jump in the prior quarter. Much of the growth in PCs was driven by a Microsoft decision to quit supporting older software, a process that Ms Whitman said was largely complete.

The high-margin printer business shrank by 5 per cent.

The company said last month it would split into two listed companies next year, separating its computer and printer businesses from its faster-growing corporate hardware and services operations, and eliminate another 5,000 jobs as part of its turnaround plan.

“This separation was totally the right thing to do for this company,” Ms Whitman said Tuesday. “It is remarkable how it focuses the mind on overhead.”

HP shares fell 0.77 per cent after closing up 0.35 per cent at $37.63 on the New York Stock Exchange.

Reuters