HP quarterly net profit falls - Plans to Cut 15,000 Jobs to save $2 billion
SAN FRANCISCO Friday, November 18, 2005 : Hewlett-Packard Co. on Thursday posted a lower quarterly net profit, due in part to charges related to ongoing jobs cuts.
Per-share results excluding items beat the average Wall Street estimate and shares of HP rose nearly 3 percent in extended trade.
HP, also the world's largest printer maker, said net income for its fourth fiscal quarter ended Oct. 31 fell to $416 million, or 14 cents per share, from $1.09 billion, or 37 cents per share, in the year-ago period. Revenue rose to $22.9 billion from $21.4 billion.
Excluding items, HP said its profit rose to 51 cents per share, compared with the average Wall Street estimate of 46 cents per share, according to Reuters Estimates. Revenue was pegged at $22.8 billion.
HP is in the process of rolling through job cuts of nearly 15,000 it announced in July to help cut annual costs by almost $2 billion. The company's per-share results, excluding items, in all four fiscal 2005 quarters have topped average Wall Street expectations as its businesses have improved.
For the current, first quarter, HP said it expects earnings per share before items of 46 cents to 48 cents, excluding 3 cents to 4 cents of stock-based compensation expense.
Analysts currently expect Palo Alto, California-based HP to earn 44 cents per share, on average, before items, in the first quarter. So far this year, HP is the best performing stock in the Dow Jones Industrial Average, with a gain of some 35 percent, based on Wednesday's closing price. Over the same period, shares of IBM, also a Dow component, have declined some 12 percent. The index is down roughly 1 percent on the year.
HP shares rose 73 cents, or 2.6 percent, to close at $29.00 on the New York Stock Exchange. In extended trade on Inet, the shares climbed to $29.80.