Interesting FWIW
Hewlett-Packard Reviews its Map to Success
By Eric Moskowitz Staff Reporter
It was the middle of 1997 and Hewlett-Packard (HWP:NYSE) was trying to decide which direction the company should go in next. Amid all the discussions, Richard Belluzzo, H-P CEO Lew Platt's second in command, came up with a plan to "get some of the fat out of the company's bloated infrastructure," says an H-P executive, who requested anonymity.
In the end, Platt decided to do very little. If anything, more emphasis was placed on remaining among the top tier of PC giants that were pulling away from the rest of the industry. H-P was by then a top-five player in PCs for the first time, and its stock was flying. The thinking was: If it ain't broke, don't fix it. From 1991 to mid-1997, investors had seen the company's stock rise more than 800%. In that time, the Palo Alto, Calif.-based company, thanks to its dominant position in the fast-growing printer business, had become the envy of the Street.
Fast forward to a year and a half later, and it looks like Belluzzo may have foreseen signs of a slowdown: H-P has lost the earnings and revenue momentum it had for much of this decade. Its once-buoyant stock is down 12% since July 1997. Belluzzo, the man responsible for H-P's fast-growing computer division, left the company in February to become head of Silicon Graphics (SGI:NYSE). Belluzzo wasn't available for comment.
This week, H-P finally acknowledged its growing problems and said it has begun reviewing its business operations. The last time the company was in trouble, co-founder David Packard came out of retirement in 1990 to successfully re-energize the company.
H-P is far from being on its deathbed. It has a loyal employee base and still enjoys a reputation as perhaps the premier global technology company. And despite a more competitive printer landscape, H-P is still in a dominant position. Although its stock has been bouncing around this year, Platt has had some success with cutting costs, although he has introduced an idea that is anathema to H-P traditionalists: cut employees.
H-P recently offered a voluntary severance package to employees, and 1,850 of them took it. "I'm leaving in a week, but I still think it's a great company," says Kirk Lindstrom, an H-P employee for 20 years who works in H-P's semiconductor division. Lindstrom says there is no panic within the company because employees still have faith in H-P's long-term stock performance. "If I thought H-P's problems were serious or unfixable, I would have sold off all my stock by now," he says. Lindstrom estimates that employees on average have 50% to 75% of their equity in H-P stock.
Now that's loyalty, especially for a company that still hasn't discovered a way to stop declining revenues. Revenue growth has fallen to 10% a year, less than half of what it was two years ago. Last week in a conference call with analysts, H-P's CFO Bob Wayman led the Street lower on revenue projections for the next fiscal year from 15% to a range of 8% to 10%. A number of analysts lowered their H-P ratings and pushed the company's stock from 65 to 58 last week. The stock rebounded on news of H-P restructuring and closed at 63 Tuesday.
H-P will need to do more than talk to turn things around. "David Packard came in and kicked ass when he came back, and it needs someone to do this again," says Mark Specker, an analyst with Soundview Financial, who rates the stock a hold. "This restructuring talk may have been in the works for awhile, but I don't see the change agent that was there the last time around in the early 1990s." Soundview has not done any recent underwriting for H-P.
Specker sees the company getting more directly involved in providing better business services to clients. H-P has the massive sales force needed to do this, points out Specker, but it continues to lose business -- and market share -- to IBM (IBM:NYSE) and Sun Microsystems (SUNW:Nasdaq) in places such as server business. The reason? H-P may be even more reliant on its "indirect" resellers than Compaq (CPQ:NYSE). Once it gets a business contract, H-P hires a reseller to deliver the product, says Paul McGuckin, Gartner Group's lead analyst on H-P.
"This is a source of frustration for a lot of H-P customers I have talked with," says McGuckin, who notes this method is a more expensive way to do business in today's economy. "Customers like to work with one business provider, and other companies are adapting to this way of thinking faster." H-P's Ann Livermore, as the head of the newly created Enterprise Computing Solutions division, "will hopefully be able to make a big push" for services, adds McGuckin.
Other H-P watchers believe the company, which traditionally promotes from within, needs to bring in some new blood. "It would be very interesting if H-P decided to bring in someone from the outside," says Craig Johnson, a principal of the PITA Group consulting firm. Gartner's McGuckin warns that it would be too much of a clash of cultures if someone from the new tech world replaced Platt, who has been with the company since 1966. Instead, an outsider as a deputy to Platt could work. "I think it wouldn't be such a bad idea to bring a No. 2 that could get Wall Street's attention like a Michael Dell or Larry Ellison," he said.
The chances of Platt -- who introduced such successful PC products as the HP Pavillion for home users and the HP Omnibook laptop -- getting pushed out by H-P's board is remote. "If Platt gets knocked out, you may not be covering this company anymore," says Randy Befumo, an analyst with Legg Mason Fund Adviser. Befumo believes that one of the three major indirect PC sellers -- H-P, Compaq and IBM -- may not be in the PC business in the next three years.
H-P's PC business, which makes up 19% of revenues, has become too big a part of the company's revenue mix, says Befumo, who notes H-P spends too much on PC capital spending, considering the company outsources its PC manufacturing to resellers. H-P's return of capital in PCs "isn't anywhere near where it should be," Befumo says. "Look at the company's free cash flow; H-P is nowhere near Dell in this department." In terms of free cash-flow margin, Dell's is 10% while H-P's is only 6%. (Free cash-flow margin is a company's free cash flow divided by its total revenues.)
H-P is too good a company not to figure out how to tinker with some of these balance-sheet discrepancies. "I think there will be a reorganization; I just don't think it will go all the way to the top," says a Wall Street analyst, who requested anonymity.
Analysts and investors will get a chance to find out what Platt is thinking on Tuesday, when H-P has its annual meeting with Wall Street. |