Tag Archives: acn

How IBM, Xerox Get Impacted By HPE Services Spinoff, CSC Merger

The surprise move by Hewlett Packard Enterprise ( HPE ) to spin off and merge its enterprise-services division with Computer Sciences Corp. ( CSC ) could put pressure on IBM ( IBM ) to respond, analysts say. Shares in HPE jumped late Tuesday after the company announced the tax-free spinoff  of its services business. HPE also reported better-than-expected fiscal Q2 earnings, but EPS was still down 2% year over year. “We believe the HPE Services plus CSC transaction will cause Xerox ( XRX ) services to be looked at as an acquisition target, as well as put pressure on IBM to consider making acquisitions in its services business,” Citigroup analyst Jim Suva said in a report. The combination of HPE’s enterprise services business and CSC will have about $26 billion in annual sales. The deal is expected to close in March 2017. Jason Kupferberg, analyst at Jefferies, says the HPE-CSC deal has merit. “We believe the combined firm will trail only IBM Global Services and Accenture ( ACN ) in terms of global IT Services revenue,” Kupferberg said in a report. “While neither CSC or HPE enterprise services are industry growth leaders and have been in turnaround mode, we see strategic rationale for the merger, given the complementary vertical exposures (CSC strong in insurance, health care and banking, with HPE enterprise services known for pharmaceuticals, transportation, and telecom.)” Hewlett-Packard split into two publicly traded companies last November. Shareholders of HP Enterprise and CSC will each own half of the new company’s shares. Global Equities Research analyst Trip Chowdhry said the HPE services-CSC merger is the combination of two struggling companies and could result in 65,000 layoffs. “Two bad assets does not make one good asset,” he said.

Infosys Outlook Might Impress Wall Street More Than Q4 Improvement

Wall Street seems to be more interested in what the Indian outsourcing companies will do next than how they performed previously. No surprises are expected when one of the biggest, Infosys ( INFY ), reports its fiscal 2016 fourth-quarter earnings way after the close Thursday, scheduled for 11:45 p.m. ET — or about 9:15 a.m. Friday in Bangalore. The consensus of analysts polled by Thomson Reuters suggests Infosys will report earnings up 5% to 23 cents minus items, on revenue up 13.6% to $2.43  billion for the quarter ended March 31. That would be its best revenue growth rate in six quarters and its best earnings growth in the last five quarters. Robert W. Baird analyst David Koning sees the EPS consensus as “reasonable,” but anyone expecting a tad above consensus for revenue “seems aggressive based on historical trends,” he said in a Tuesday research note. Baird rates Infosys stock neutral, with a 19 price target. Cowen analyst Bryan Bergin, who rates the stock as market perform with an 18 price target, says the company’s Q4 “results tend to be seasonally soft, and we don’t expect any surprises there with low single-digit sequential revenue improvement, modeled at 1.4% (quarter to quarter in U.S. dollars, or about 2% in constant currency).” Instead, Bergin said, “the primary focus will be its FY’17 guide. In sum, expectations are somewhat elevated going into this print, given INFY’s recent momentum. We think a year-on-year top-line (in constant currency) growth midpoint of (about) 12% is benchmark for expectations. (We model a foreign-exchange headwind of 2.5%.) Its guide on operating margin will also be a key focus; we think at worst, a flat operating margin target range of 24%-26% is built into expectations, given its ambitious long-term target of 30% by 2020.” Analysts expect fiscal 2017 EPS of 98 cents minus items on revenue of $10.41 billion, up from an expected 90 cents and $9.46 billion, respectively, the previous year. For fiscal 2015, Infosys earned 87 cents per share minus items on $8.61 billion. Will Infosys Impact Cognizant? Analyst Koning seems as interested in what Infosys’ guidance does for rival Cognizant Technology Solutions ( CTSH ) as what it does for Infosys. He issued a separate research note just on Infosys’ impact on Cognizant. “CTSH likely holds up OK, even if INFY guides fiscal 2017 revenue a bit below the Street,” Koning said. “When INFY provided initial full-year guidance below the Street in each of the last three years, INFY was down 5%-21%, but CTSH was (down) 3% to (up) 1%.” Cognizant stock was flat in early trading in the stock market today, near 59.50. Infosys stock was down a fraction, near 18. Cognizant is trading 14% off a 69.80 record high set Oct. 28. Infosys is trading 6% off a 16-year high of 19.49 set April 4. While Infosys earns a strong IBD Composite Rating of 83 — meaning it’s outperforming 83% of S&P 500 companies on earnings, sales, institutional ownership, stock activity and other metrics — Cognizant rates even better with an 87. Bigger tech outsourcer Accenture ( ACN ) rates an 89, while the best in the group are the relatively small CGI Group ( GIB ) (with a 92 CR) and CDW ( CDW ) (with a 91). As organizations look to digitize their operations and move to the cloud, Cognizant, Infosys and other tech outsourcers are becoming increasingly important as a way to start or accelerate the process, as a means to contract-out process management entirely and as a way to limit or reduce expenses. Service-level agreements “are changing to reflect this (conversion from business-process outsourcing to business-process management ), becoming more business-outcome-focused and leading the market to shift from a pure RFP (requests for proposal) procurement approach to a managed-service, end-to-end solution offering,” Cowen’s Bergin said in an April 1 research note.

Accenture Rides Clients’ Disruption Avoidance; Stock Rides New High

Shares of Accenture, the tech outsourcing and consulting company, jumped to a record high Thursday after the company reported a 24% improvement in fiscal second-quarter earnings, well beyond what Wall Street expected. It also beat revenue estimates. The company also raised its earnings guidance for the fiscal year ending in August. The improvements are driven by the digital transformation of Accenture’s customers and their fear of disruption, according to the CEO. Accenture ( ACN ) stock was up 5.5% in afternoon trading in the stock market today , above 113 and up more than 20% from a seven-month low of  93.35 hit on Feb. 9, in the depths of the infamous Software Sag of 2016. Rivals  IBM ( IBM ) and  Cognizant Technology Solutions ( CTSH ) were each up more than 1.7% Thursday afternoon, and India tech outsourcer  Infosys ( INFY ) was up nearly 1%. Dublin-based Accenture said adjusted EPS reached $1.34 after removing income taxes and the gain on the sale of Navitaire, vs. $1.08 a year ago, on revenue up 6% to $7.9 billion. Analysts polled by Thomson Reuters expected EPS of $1.18 minus items for the quarter ended Feb. 29 on revenue of $7.72 billion. “We are benefiting from the focused investments we are making to rotate our business to new, high-growth areas where our capabilities are clearly resonating with the needs of our clients and differentiating us in the marketplace,” said Accenture CEO Pierre Nanterme in the earnings release. “At the same time, we continue to manage Accenture with discipline to further enhance our competitiveness. We remain very well-positioned to continue driving profitable growth and delivering value for our clients and shareholders.” Accenture CEO: Economic Environment Sluggish In the company’s earnings conference call with analysts, Nanterme, echoing his remarks in October,  said, “The overall economic environment is sluggish, to say the least … unstable, risky, extraordinarily complex.” He said he is “not noticing” much change in the sources of revenue from his customers, but “it’s all about digitalization. … All the leaders in all the industries are subject to disruption. That’s the new factor in town. It’s about not being disrupted … . I see this cycle is here for quite a while. They have to invest (into) rationalization of the operations, IT efficiency …  across the board … (which)  is driving our business.” The company guided the current Q3 revenue to $8.1 billion to $8.35 billion, up 7% to 10% in local currency after assuming a 2.5% foreign exchange impact, compared with $8.275 billion a year ago. The midpoint is slightly above analyst views. The company didn’t project Q3 earnings, but analysts expect EPS ex items of $1.42, up 9%. Accenture raised its fiscal year earnings guidance to $5.21 to $5.32 per share excluding the after-tax impact of the gain on the sale of Navitaire vs. its earlier guidance of $5.09 to $5.24. Analysts were modeling $5.22, up 8.3% from $4.82 in fiscal 2015. At the new $5.265 midpoint, the fresh guidance represents a 9.2% gain for adjusted EPS. Accenture said sales for its communications, media and technology unit rose 6% to $1.61 billion; financial services also rose 6%, to $1.59 billion; health and public services rose 12% to $1.48 billion; and products rose 8% to $1.85 billion. But resources, which include the struggling energy industry, fell 3% to $1.21 billion. North America sales rose 11% to $3.41 billion, while Europe rose 5% growth to $2.78 billion and growth markets slowed 4% to $1.37 billion. The company declared a semiannual cash dividend of $1.10 per share. In Q2 it repurchased or redeemed 8.1 million shares for $829 million, bringing the total spent  on repurchases to $1.49 billion for the year. With an IBD Composite Rating of 82, Accenture is one of the better performers in IBD’s Computer-Tech Services industry group, among the top 18% of all stocks on a variety of metrics, including earnings and sales growth and stock performance. The biggest company in the group, IBM, rates a 55 CR. Infosys has an 87 CR and Cognizant an 84. Image provided by Shutterstock .