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Hewlett Packard Enterprise Jumps 15% As Earnings Edge Views

Hewlett Packard Enterprise ( HPE ) stock rocketed 15% in morning trading on the stock market today . Late Thursday HPE edged above earnings-per-share expectations for its fiscal Q1 ended Jan. 31, met on revenue and roughly met views with its Q2 earnings guidance, while also promising to return more capital to shareholders. For Q1, the company posted EPS ex items of 41 cents, down 6.8% from pro forma earnings of 44 cents a share in the year-earlier quarter. Sales fell 3% to $12.7 billion. For Q2, HPE expects EPS ex items of 39 cents to 43 cents. It didn’t give revenue guidance. “All in all, the headline news looks like a solid report from a top/bottom-line perspective,” Daniel Morgan, a vice president of HPE shareholder Synovus Trust, told IBD via email. On Wednesday, the company filed with the SEC to change its pro forma figures for the year-earlier quarter, which it issued after its Nov. 1 split from the legacy Silicon Valley pioneer Hewlett-Packard Co. HPE contains the business software and services, servers, storage and cloud-migration operations of the old company, with the new HP Inc. ( HPQ ) taking the PC and printer business. HPE now has more freedom to battle broad-based business-technology providers such as IBM ( IBM ), Cisco Systems ( CSCO ) and Oracle ( ORCL ). HPE changed its year-earlier figure for EPS minus items to 44 cents, from 48 cents. It didn’t change its pro forma revenue figure. Analysts polled by Thomson Reuters had expected adjusted EPS of 40 cents for fiscal Q1, though it’s unclear if that consensus estimate would have changed with the new pro forma figure. Analysts expected revenue of $12.68 billion. For Q2, analysts had modeled EPS ex items of 42 cents on sales of $12.3 billion. The company’s fiscal 2016 EPS ex items guidance of $1.85 to $1.95 met the views of analysts polled by Thomson Reuters. And HPE maintained its fiscal 2016 guidance on free cash flow — cash from operations minus capital expenditures — of $2 billion to $2.2 billion. HPE shares fell 2.2% to 13.60 Thursday. The stock, which debuted in early November, peaked Dec. 1 at 15.88. Looking for ways to speed growth and improve shareholder value, the Hewlett-Packard split came in the face of faster-growing competition from upstarts leading the way to cloud computing. Last week, HP Inc. said its Q1 EPS and sales each fell 12%, to 36 cents and $12.2 billion. HPE Says Sales In Constant Currency Rose For All Segments “During our first quarter as an independent company, we saw the progress that comes from being more focused and nimble,” HPE CEO Meg Whitman said in the company’s earnings release. Whitman also serves as chair of HP Inc. and had been CEO and chairwoman of the former Hewlett-Packard Co. before engineering the split-up. “We delivered a third consecutive quarter of year-over-year constant-current revenue growth, and excluding the impact of recent M&A activity, we saw revenue growth in constant currency across every business segment for the first time since 2010,” she said. Revenue rose 4% year over year in constant currency, the company said. HPE CFO Tim Stonesifer said in the earnings release that the company will “return at least 100% of our free cash flow outlook to shareholders” in fiscal 2016, after devoting $1.3 billion to share repurchases and dividends in Q1. The networking business was the clear winner last quarter, and in fact the only business that notched revenue growth. The company said its Enterprise Group overall rose 1% to $7.1 billion in revenue, with a 13.4% operating margin. Networking sales jumped 54% from the year-earlier quarter — more than 60% in constant currency — but storage revenue fell 3%, and tech services tumbled 9%. Also slipping were server sales, albeit by just 1%. Before the release, shareholder Morgan, of Synovus Trust, told IBD he was “looking for stabilization in areas of weakness (by) expecting strength in servers into next year, as cloud and Big Data growth spur purchases. Servers represents 48% of the Enterprise (Group) segment’s revenue and was (up) 5% year-to-year last quarter.” HPE’s separate Enterprise Services segment sales fell 6% to $4.7 billion, the company said. Infrastructure tech outsourcing sales fell 8%, while application and business services revenue slipped 3%. Software services fell 10% to $780 million. License revenue fell 6%, support fell 13%, professional services revenue contracted 7%, and software as a service (Saas) sales fell 9%. Financial services, which help customers pay for their purchases, fell 3% to $776 million. In its filing with the SEC on Wednesday, the company said the main differences with its new pro forma EPS number for the year-earlier quarter “are related to cash acquired and debt incurred by HPE just prior to the distribution (of new shares to old shareholders). The primary differences between the previously provided figures and adjusted cash flow from operations and adjusted free cash flow are related to prepaids, deposits and liabilities associated with property, plant and equipment, pension obligations and income tax asset and liabilities that transferred to HPE from its former parent just prior to the distribution.”

IBD 50’s Broadcom Jumps Into Buy Range, Ambarella Down On Earnings

Apple ( AAPL ) supplier and IBD 50 list growth stock  Broadcom ( AVGO ) opened sharply up Friday, jumping into buy range. Thursday afternoon the company’s  quarterly report beat estimates  despite slowing iPhone sales. In midmorning trading Friday Broadcom was up 6%, near 146 — putting it now at the top of buy range from a double-bottom base with a buy point of 138.79. Several high-rated chipmakers have been approaching buy zones lately with the market returned to an uptrend, including the two chipmakers on the IBD 50 list: Broadcom and Nvidia ( NVDA ), which makes chips for computation-intensive processes including graphics, gaming and self-driving cars. Ambarella ( AMBA ) stock was down more than 5% in the stock market today , after the maker of image-processing chips issued disappointing revenue guidance Thursday afternoon while topping views for its fourth quarter. Friday analysts lifted price targets for Broadcom and lowered them for Ambarella. Ambarella is a supplier to action-camera maker GoPro ( GPRO ), which was trading up more than 5% Friday. It’s down about 21% this year. “During the fourth quarter we saw strong sales from professional IP security, automotive aftermarket, home monitoring and flying camera markets,” Ambarella CEO Fermi Wang said in the company’s earnings release. “This was largely offset, however, by a continued decline in the wearable sports camera market.” Ambarella is working to diversify its end markets and customer base. For its Q4 ended Jan. 31, Ambarella said revenue rose 5% from the year-earlier quarter to $68 million, and earnings per share fell 5.9% to 64 cents. That beat the view of analysts polled by Thomson Reuters, who on average expected EPS of 48 cents on revenue of $66 million. But Ambarella gave lagging guidance for its fiscal Q1 2017. It sees revenue of $55 million to $57 million and net income of $8 million to $10 million. Analysts polled by Thomson Reuters have been expecting revenue of $62 million, and net income of just over $14 million. Ambarella gets an IBD Composite Rating of 74 and Broadcom a 98 out of a possible 99, factoring in a variety of metrics such as earnings growth and stock-price gains. RELATED: Can IBD 50’s Broadcom Drive Chip Stocks?

Apple Supplier Broadcom Rockets On Post-Merger Q1 Earnings Beat

Broadcom ( AVGO ) stock rocketed late Thursday after the Apple ( AAPL ) chip supplier topped Wall Street’s fiscal Q1 earnings-per-share expectations by 11 cents and issued Q2 guidance that edged analyst forecasts. Broadcom CEO Hock Tan hinted that Broadcom is already ramping for the likely September release of Apple’s iPhone 7. He acknowledged that wireless demand declined 15% sequentially in Q1 on typical seasonality haunting “our North American customer” (i.e. Apple). Tan isn’t alone. Last month, fellow Apple supplier Qorvo ( QRVO ) guided to weak Q4 sales, tugging Skyworks Solutions ( SWKS ), NXP Semiconductors ( NXPI ) and Cirrus Logic ( CRUS ) into a hole. But Tan expects Q1 to be the year’s “trough.” After-hours Thursday, Broadcom stock lifted 7% on the fiscal Q1 beat, which followed the finalized acquisition of Broadcom by the former Avago Technologies on Feb. 1. The Q1 results relate solely to the former Avago, according to the company release, as the quarter ended Jan. 31, just before the deal was finalized. Broadcom stock closed up a fraction during the regular session. Apple Seasonality Pains Ebb For fiscal Q1, Broadcom reported non-GAAP figures of $2.41 earnings per share on $1.78 billion in sales, up 15% and 8%, respectively, vs. the year-earlier quarter. Both measures topped the consensus of 30 analysts polled by Thomson Reuters for $2.30 and $1.75 billion. During Q1, wired and enterprise storage sales grew 2% and 6%, respectively, on a sequential basis. Industrial sales fell 10% sequentially, trailing the 15% decline in wireless sales, Tan told analysts on the conference call. “Last year, we had unusually high demand in Q1 from a North American customer which offset normal seasonality,” he said. “This year, however — as we all know — seasonality returned and there was a product life cycle demand decline from that specific customer.” This week IDC issued a smartphone forecast that sees iPhone shipments declining 0.1% this year as smartphones running Alphabet ‘s ( GOOGL ) Android operating system rise 7.6%. Tan said on Broadcom’s conference call that he expects weak smartphone demand to reverse in the second half of 2016. Enterprise storage comprises 38% of the former Avago’s total Q1 revenue — the largest segment and leading wireless sales which contributed 32% to the total pot. But, the wired segment is growing and during the April quarter will bring in 55% of sales, Tan said. Wired Sales To Grow The midpoint of current-quarter guidance for $3.55 billion in sales on a non-GAAP basis, plus or minus $75 million, nearly touched the consensus model for $3.57 billion. Current-quarter sales views reflect the combined Avago-Broadcom company. During Q2, wireless and enterprise storage sales will shrink as chunks of total sales to 23% and 17%, respectively, Tan said. Still, all eyes are on Broadcom’s “North American customer” which increased the chipmaker’s RF content in its upcoming flagship smartphone, he said. “We are already pre-building significant quantities of our RF chips” for the second-half of 2016 ramp, he said. “We increase our RF content by 20% year after year in this high-end smartphone market.” But Tan expects greater strength in the wired segment where Broadcom expects to add new products. The segment will also benefit from increased enterprise demand. In May 2015, the former Avago announced a $37 billion bid for fellow Apple supplier Broadcom, kicking off a record-busting year of consolidation in the semiconductor industry amid macro weakness, slowing growth and ramping costs. Post-merger, the company retained Broadcom’s name and Avago’s ticker symbol “AVGO.” Broadcom is one of two chipmakers on the IBD 50 list of top-rated growth stocks. The other is Tesla Motors ( TSLA ) partner  Nvidia ( NVDA ).