Dell Q3 2012 Results:
Earning Up 17% - EPS Beats By 2 Cents - Revenue Falls Short
November 16, 2011
Dell’s
continued strategic focus on higher-value opportunities, combined with
an increased mix of enterprise solutions and services sales, resulted in
increased profitability on revenue of $15.4 billion in its third
quarter, flat compared with revenue a year ago.
Dell chalked up earnings excluding
items of 54 cents per share, up from 45 cents in the year-earlier
period. Net Q3 earnings were up to $893 million, or 49 cents a share,
from $822 million, or 42 cents a share, in the year-ago period.
Wall Street was looking for earnings of 47 cents per share on revenue of
$15.65 billion.
“Our results this quarter and over
the past year reflect a new Dell, one focused on providing our customers
productivity-enhancing solutions either developed organically or
acquired,” said Michael Dell, chairman and CEO. “We’re now investing in
research and development activities at almost a billion-dollar annual
run rate and our earnings per share is up 86 percent over the last 12
months.”
Revenue for Dell’s enterprise solutions and services business –
including sales of servers, storage, networking, and services –
increased 8 percent over the same quarter last year to $4.7 billion, an
all-time high. As the revenue mix steadily shifts more to the
higher-value enterprise portfolio, Dell is delivering on its commitment
to improve profitability, with operating income up 12 percent for the
quarter and at 7.6 percent of revenue for the fiscal year to date.
“We delivered strong third-quarter results, maintaining our focus on
operating income and improving our mix of higher-value enterprise
solutions,” said Brian Gladden, Dell chief financial officer.
“Consistent with our strategy and the investments we have made, we
continued to see excellent momentum in our enterprise business, with
double-digit revenue growth in services, servers and networking, and in
key growth countries, despite some macroeconomic uncertainty.”
Results:
Revenue in the quarter was
$15.4 billion, flat compared with the same quarter last
year.
GAAP earnings per share was 49
cents, up 17 percent; non-GAAP EPS was 54 cents, up
20 percent.
GAAPoperating income
was $1.1 billion, or 7.4 percent of revenue. Non-GAAP
operating income was $1.3 billion, or 8.4 percent of
revenue.
Cash flow from operations was
$851 million for the quarter and $5.2 billion over the last
four quarters. Dell ended the quarter with $16 billion in
cash and investments and repurchased $600 million in stock
in the quarter. For the year, Dell has spent $2.18 billion
to purchase 142 million shares of Dell stock.
Strategic Highlights:
Enterprise
solutions and services revenue was $4.7 billion in the
quarter and represented 31 percent of Dell’s revenue.
Server and
networking revenue increased 13 percent year over year,
driven by continued momentum in server virtualization.
Dell is working with customers to provide
mission-critical services and solutions around the
server, creating competitive differentiation, richer
configurations and stronger profitability.
Dell-branded
storage revenue grew 23 percent year over year, driven
by demand for EqualLogic and Compellent technology.
Dell Services
revenue grew 10 percent to $2.1 billion and now
represents 14 percent of Dell’s business. Dell’s total
value of new services contracts signed for the past 12
months is $1.9 billion. Services backlog is now $15.5
billion, up 11 percent from a year ago.
Business Units and
Regions:
Large
Enterprise had$4.5 billion of revenue,up 4 percent from a year ago on a 19 percent
increase in revenue for servers and networking and a 14
percent increase in revenue for services. Enterprise
solutions and services revenue was $1.9 billion.
Operating income was $441 million, or 9.8 percent of
revenue.
Public had
$4.4 billion of revenue, down 2 percent from a year ago,
and including an increase in services revenue of 7
percent. Operating income was $463 million or 10.6
percent of revenue. Enterprise solutions and services
revenue was $1.6 billion. Spending was slow in U.S.
federal and Western Europe. Customers continue to invest
in our solutions to reduce spending and increase
productivity.
Small and
Medium Business had revenue of $3.7 billion, up 1
percent. Operating income was $386 million or 10.4
percent of revenue. Enterprise solutions and services
revenue was $1.1 billion, an all-time high, and up 18
percent, driven by a gain in servers of 18 percent;
services of 23 percent, and storage of 9 percent.
Consumer
revenue was $2.8 billion, a 6 percent decline. Operating
income was $76 million or 2.7 percent of revenue. The
migration to higher-value products has proven to be
effective, with overall company revenue for the high-end
XPS consumer laptop growing 207 percent. XPS revenue now
accounts for nearly 20 percent of Dell’s total consumer
laptop business.
Internationally, revenue ingrowth countries
– defined as those outside the U.S., Canada, Western
Europe and Japan – grew 11 percent in the third quarter
and is up 14 percent for the fiscal year. These
geographies account for 29 percent of Dell’s revenue.
Regionally, Asia Pacific and Japan had the greatest
revenue growth at 10 percent, led by China’s 23 percent
growth and Australia/New Zealand’s 13 percent increase.
EMEA revenue increased 4 percent. Revenue in European
growth countries increased 12 percent, led by the Czech
Republic, Poland and Russia. Revenue in BRIC countries
increased 14 percent.
Company Outlook:
Dell
has delivered $5.3 billion in operating income on a trailing, 12-month
basis, and a 44-percent increase year-over-year on a non-GAAP basis. The
company remains committed to its strategy and is on track to exceed its
guidance of 17 to 23 percent full fiscal-year operating income growth.
Given the uncertain macroeconomic environment and complexity in working
through the industry-wide hard drive issue, the company is trending to
the lower end of the range of its revenue outlook of 1 to 5-percent full
fiscal-year growth.
Results through Q3 show that Dell is on track for another outstanding
year. The company has made significant progress in building a more
diversified and competitive set of enterprise and services-focused
businesses that now represent almost 50 percent of its margin.