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    HP slips on concerns of delay in turnaround

    (Reuters) - Shares of Hewlett-Packard Co fell more than 7 percent Thursday, after the world's No. 1 computer maker posted a sharp decline in quarterly earnings and warned it would take several years to turn around its sprawling businesses.

    Chief Executive Meg Whitman, who took over the top job in September after the company fired Leo Apothekar, requested investors to keep their patience and said a turnaround the size the company was efforting took considerable time.

    J.P. Morgan Securities, however, said secular, macro and company-related risk may delay an appreciable turnaround.

    RBC Capital said investors may look past the choppy revenue performance, given the temporary difficulty in procuring hard-disk drives, but added that it expects problems to continue into the second quarter.

    On Wednesday, HP, which has been trying to pick itself up from the mess the company found itself last year, reported a decline in sales in three of its key units: personal computers, printers and enterprise equipment.

    "Revenue shortfall in PCs and significant quarter-on-quarter margin deterioration in every business raise questions about the competitiveness, cost structure and secular pressures in HP's business segments," Morgan Stanley said in a note to analysts.

    Wall Street analysts fear that the multiple pressures that weighed on margins -- including yen strength, competitive hardware pricing and the ongoing HP Services restructuring -- are more than "one-quarter issues," and could continue into coming quarters.

    Earlier this week, Dell Inc, the world's No. 3 personal computer maker, also posted fiscal fourth-quarter earnings below analysts' expectations and forecast fiscal first-quarter revenue below estimates, stoking fears the PC industry has not fully emerged from its downturn.

    "While Dell did not have a particularly good January earnings call and in our opinion left a great deal of ambiguity in terms of the forces that impacted the January quarter, we believe HP's report, by comparison, was worse," said BMO Capital Markets' analyst Keith Bachman.

    Bachman cut his price target on HP's stock to $33 from $35.

    Of the 34 analysts covering HP, 18 rate it at "hold," five at "sell," six at "strong buy," and five at "buy," with a mean price target of $30.40, according to Thomson Reuters' StarMine data.

    Shares of HP fell to $26.85 in Thursday morning trade. The stock has lost over 40 percent of its value since its 2011 high of $49.38.

    See all articles from Reuters
     

    39 comments

    • JohnK  •  2 months ago
      Meg was a success at eBay only because she was in the right place at the right time. Ebay would have grown at that time without her, and perhaps, in spite of her. Not sure anybody can fix HP now, so if she can pull this off, she is much better than I think she is. I am betting against it, however.
      • Roro 2 months ago
        Funny how that right place at right time makes normal folks look like geniuses. I could not agree more with your comments.
      • 60Sistrunk 2 months ago
        Yes I agree too. Luck isn't all there is to it, but it does play a big part. In Meg's case she isn't normal folks... she's a self-absorbed megalomaniac.
    • ozymandias  •  2 months ago
      The last HP innovation was the half full ink cartridge.
      • JohnK 2 months ago
        Ozy, you got that right! The cartridge world refills last twice as long as the new HP cartridges.
      • ozymandias 2 months ago
        Honesty, integrity, HP thought of it.
      • Nony 2 months ago
        HP died when the partners retired.

        Sure, the following management made a lot of money and made the company bigger than IBM, but it was at the expense of its employees and innovation, something Hewlett and Packard would NEVER have done.
    • Thomas M  •  Elmhurst, Illinois  •  2 months ago
      You can move all your manufacturing capability offshore, pull tens of thousands of jobs away, leave behind a vast pool of unemployed or under employed, kill off hundreds of small businesses that used to be your suppliers
      And then wonder why no one is buying your product? Gee, I dunno.
      Maybe because NO ONE HAS MONEY to buy your now crappy products anymore.
      Bunch of economic geniuses, these people.
      • 60Sistrunk 2 months ago
        HP built its name as a technological leader that made some of the best TEST EQUIPMENT for industry. They gave that up years ago chasing the consumer market. Now they aren't a technological leader, they are an importer of Asian commodity PCs that they sell at mass merchandisers. A sad reflection on the state of industry in the USA.
    • Yavatar  •  2 months ago
      Things started going south went they started firing the people who had been with the company for years and went to a corporate mentality. HP was founded on the belief that if the employees are given an opportunity to participate quality would go up. But what did Hewlett and Packard know? Turn the environment into one of family into one of corporate beaucracy and they wonder why they can't sell stuff and how Dell took so much of their business.

      I never understood what HP gained by buying Compaq. HP had better stuff than Compaq. Buying Compaq just muddled the waters of having two different brands of the same computer from the same company with little difference aside from the branding.
    • 60Sistrunk  •  Mt Hamilton, California  •  2 months ago
      HP hired Carly Fiorina and now Meg Whitman. Numbskulls. Sell.
    • My Two Cents  •  2 months ago
      Sales for all computer manufacturers and peripherals will slow because most people are hanging onto what they have now. I know I am.
      • Tim 2 months ago
        I am with you, I've had my computer for a couple of years now and plan on keeping it for some time.
      • Doc Atomic 2 months ago
        The problem with that is when the updates won't work, and you can't get drivers anymore either, because your hardware is 'too old'. I've got a ton of old 386/486/Pentium systems here - you want any, before I throw them all out?
    • Mark  •  2 months ago
      I'm eager to see HP fail because they outsourced American jobs. Go under, you #$#$%s!!!!
      • 60Sistrunk 2 months ago
        Right on! All the US companes that offshore can eat dirt as far as I am concerned. That includes Apple too.... I even found out that many of the Craftsman mechanic's hand tools, always made in USA, are now from Asia. #$%$ Sears, you won't get any of my money. I'll happily pay 4x the price for MADE IN USA from Matco or SnapOn.
    • Daron  •  South Sioux City, Nebraska  •  2 months ago
      Sales are down because most people want an Apple MacBook Pro...not a pc that gets viruses
    • Jersey  •  Jackson, New Jersey  •  2 months ago
      Translation: Meg Whitman doesn't have any ideas on saving this company. Cannot figure out how to re-purpose HP. Layoffs from this job-creator are in the wind.
    • byron  •  2 months ago
      I guess CEO Meg will now get a 10-20 million dollar bonus for her exceptional work. Don't worry shareholders they can always lay off more people to pay for it.
    • hobo  •  Mishawaka, Indiana  •  2 months ago
      that's why i only own a mac.
    • James Thompson  •  Livonia, Michigan  •  2 months ago
      Whitman says, I'll get right on that after I cash my bonus check, maybe I'll fire some American peasants! That'll prove beyond any doubt that I'm a great American swine, I mean ceo!
    • BryanL  •  2 months ago
      They should have kept Leo Apothekar in place and moved forward with scrapping their PC business. There is little to no margin in that space. If they focused that time, effort and money on software and services they might have a chance to make a comeback. If not, you will see some major cuts at HP coming soon.
    • rokarolla  •  2 months ago
      I smell B O N U S!!
    • Choose the Red Pill  •  2 months ago
      Yes. Please have patience while the world's civilization crumbles beneath the bankster's feet.
    • Joe  •  2 months ago
      Meg Whitman is an idiot. If I owned any HPQ, I'd sell it and quickly.
    • K2  •  Dallas, Texas  •  2 months ago
      The wholly inept board of directors, Fiorino, Hurd, Apothekar and now Whitman to perform the coup de gras. Bill and Dave are rolling in their graves.
    • Tony  •  Cypress, California  •  2 months ago
      HP makes quality servers. I know because I'm in IT.
    • anotherdude  •  Roseville, California  •  2 months ago
      I'd be concerned with a "quick" turn around as it would be a sign of cooking the books or cutting costs for short term gains (ie Hurd). HP will come back, this time with a thoughtful approach (not the Leo "out of PCs" type of quick fixes).
    • Roro  •  Raleigh, North Carolina  •  2 months ago
      Well I am not surprised. It use to be when I bought an HP product, it meant quality. I bought a few HP printers that lasted years.

      Well less than a couple of years back, bought another one. The printer started giving me paper jam errors. I read the blogs and found out it was a common problem. The HP support line tried to sell me a support agreement to discuss not fix the printer. In addition, they tried to sell me a new printer for more than I could get it from the Office Supply stores. They told me it was a discounted price.

      The whole experience has really changed my mind about buying another HP product.
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