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3 Earnings Reports To Watch Tuesday: Yahoo, Intel, UnitedHealth
Yahoo ( YHOO ), Intel ( INTC ) and UnitedHealth ( UNH ) headline another busy day for earnings, though investors may look past headline EPS for all three industry giants. Yahoo Yahoo is expected to report a 53% year-over-year decline in EPS to 7 cents after the market close Tuesday. Revenue likely fell 12% to $1.08 billion, with revenue excluding traffic acquisition costs seen declining even faster. CEO Marissa Mayer has been unable to fuel significant growth since taking the helm in 2012. What investors will want to know is any information on the Yahoo bidding process, with offers due on Monday. Yahoo is entertaining offers for all or part of the Web portal, including its core U.S. operations and its Alibaba ( BABA ) stake. It’s unclear if Yahoo will say anything at all. Various reports said Verizon Communications ( VZ ) and YP Holdings, owned by Cerberus Capital and AT&T ( T ), are among the purported bidders . Yahoo stock rose 1 cent to 36.52 on the stock market today . Shares hit an 8-month high of 37.50 last week. Intel Intel also reports after Tuesday’s closing bell. Analysts expect EPS to rise 15% to 47 cents, with revenue up 8% to $13.83 billion. The key is to what extent data center chips offset weakness for PC chips. Investors will want to know if weak PC sales are continuing in Q2, and whether Intel will cut full-year guidance. Looking ahead, Apple may source 30 million to 40 million iPhone 7 modem chips from Intel, taking share from Qualcomm ( QCOM ), according to Canaccord analyst T. Michael Walkley. Qualcomm, which reports earnings Wednesday evening, will still get most of that business. Apple will release its iPhone 7 later this year. Intel rose 0.6% on Monday, find support just over its 200-day moving average. Qualcomm rose 1%, but remains in a downtrend going back to mid-2014. Apple fell 2.2%, continuing to fall after undercutting its 200-day line. UnitedHealth The No. 1 U.S. health insurer, and the first to report Q1 results, is due out Tuesday morning. Analysts expect an 18% EPS rise to $1.72, with revenue up 23% to $43.96 billion. Investors will looking for industry clues about membership, medical costs. They’ll also want to know more about UnitedHealth’s plans for the ObamaCare exchange. UnitedHealth, which was cautious about entering these marketplaces, has been the most vocal about getting out, perhaps entirely in 2017, due to ongoing losses. UnitedHealth last week announced it was exiting the Arkansas, Georgia and Michigan exchanges. If UnitedHealth drastically scales back its participation, it could reduce competition and boost premiums for enrollees. But if UnitedHealth spurs a stampede of insurers getting out, the impact could be huge. UnitedHealth stock rose to a new high a month ago, moving sideways since then. Shares rose 0.4% to 127.81 on Monday.
IBM First Quarter Earnings Come In Ahead Of Views, As Revenue Falls
IBM ( IBM ) reported better-than-expected first-quarter earnings after the market close Monday, saying progress was being made on strategic imperatives, even as revenue and earnings fell. IBM reported revenue of $18.7 billion, down 4.6% from the year-earlier quarter but edging the Wall Street consensus estimate of $18.3 billion. It reported earnings per share ex items of $2.35, well above views for $2.09, as polled by Thomson Reuters. Still, the result was down 19% year over year and marked the fourth quarter in a row of EPS declines. IBM stock, which is up 30% from a six-year low in January, was down nearly 5% in after-hours trading. The stock on Monday closed at 152.53, up a fraction. It was the 16th quarter in a row of year-over-year revenue declines, but the smallest drop in six quarters, as IBM continues to undergo a major transition. The company has also been hit by currency-exchange woes, as it derives a majority of its revenue from offshore markets. “We are pleased with progress in transforming our business,” said Martin Schroeter, IBM chief financial officer, in a conference call after earnings posted. “We’re seeing strong growth from strategic imperatives.” IBM has long been in transition, shedding hardware units and realigning its workforce to reduce costs as it focuses on growth areas such as cloud computing, Big Data analytics, security, and mobile computing — areas that it refers to as strategic imperatives. IBM has placed a big bet on Watson, known for its strong showing on the “Jeopardy” game show but now key to IBM’s Cognitive Solutions business. IBM initially deployed Watson in the fields of health care, financial services and academia. It’s now accelerating the delivery of cognitive computing to more business and government customers. Revenue from strategic imperatives rose 14% year over year (up 17% adjusting for currency). Total cloud revenue rose 34%. IBM said cloud revenue over the trailing 12 months was $10.8 billion. It said revenues from mobile increased 88%, with an 18% gain from security. “We did what we set out to do at the start of the year, showing our strategy is right,” Schroeter said. At its Investor Briefing in February, IBM said it would revise its financial reporting to reflect the transformation of the business and provide investors with better visibility into its operating model. This includes disclosing additional information on its strategic imperatives by segment, starting with Q1. For its Cognitive Solutions business, revenues fell 1.7% year over year to $4 billion (but were up 0.4% after adjusting for currency). IBM said it had “strong growth” in the Watson businesses. Revenue from IBM’s Global Business Services, which includes consulting and global process services, fell 4.3% to $4.1 billion, (down 2.3% adjusting for currency). Strategic imperatives revenue within the segment was up 19% and generated nearly half of segment revenue, IBM said. Revenue from its Technology Services and Cloud Platforms group, which includes infrastructure services and integration software fell 1.5% to $8.4 billion (up 1.9% adjusting for currency). IBM said revenue from strategic imperatives in the group rose 41%, driven by hybrid cloud infrastructure engagements. Revenue from the company’s hard-hit Systems group, which includes computer hardware and operating systems software, plunged 22% to $1.7 billion (down 20.6% adjusting for currency). “IBM has established itself as the industry leader in total cloud, analytics and cognitive, all of which helped drive our strategic imperatives revenue growth at a strong double-digit rate, substantially faster than the market,” said Ginni Rometty, IBM chairwoman and CEO, in prepared remarks in the earnings release. In 2015, IBM’s strategic imperatives generated $28.9 billion in revenue, up 26% adjusting for currency, and represented 35% of total revenue. It’s expected to grow to $40 billion and represent more than 40% of revenue in 2018. IBM continues to expect full-year 2016 operating diluted earnings per share of “at least” $13.50 per share.