Mike, Your favorite Forbes writer now works for the NYT. Does that mean it is now an acceptable paper in your eyes? <g>
May 15, 1998
Market Place: Value of Spin on Wall Street to Two Companies
By GRETCHEN MORGENSON
NEW YORK -- What's the value of some good spin on Wall Street nowadays? By Thursday's reckoning, about $15 billion.
That's a conclusion one can draw from looking at trading in the shares of Hewlett-Packard and IBM, two of the biggest technology companies.
In heavy trading Thursday, Hewlett-Packard's shares fell 14 percent, or $11.3125, to close at $70.3125 -- erasing roughly $12 billion in stock-market value. The largest one-day drop for Hewlett-Packard in almost six years came after the company warned analysts late Wednesday that second-quarter results would be far weaker than expected. Management said earnings would be 65 cents a share, well below the 78 cents analysts had anticipated.
Usually other companies in the same business also fall on such news. Indeed, Dell Computer shares ended the day down $3, to $95.25, and Compaq Computer slipped 31.25 cents, to $31.5625.
Not IBM. At one point during Thursday's trading, its shares were up more than $7, or 6 percent, to $129.3125, an all-time high. It ended the day up $3.9375, at $125.8125 -- adding about $3 billion in stock-market value.
Investors piling out of Hewlett-Packard seemed to head straight for IBM. Why? One reason may have been that investors liked IBM's price-earnings ratio, which is lower than Hewlett-Packard's. Also, even as Hewlett-Packard was warning investors of its troubles, Louis Gerstner Jr., IBM's chairman and chief executive, was painting a pretty picture for analysts of where his company would finish the year.
Never mind that personal-computer price wars are escalating. Forget that IBM's mainframe market share is down. So what if revenue growth is in the low single digits? Gerstner, who talks to the Street but once a year, said the long-term future looked bright. Analysts raved.
To be sure, if IBM can get growth in its services business back up to 20 percent, as Gerstner hopes, the company's revenues could again reach double-digit increases. That hope was what Wall Street was responding to Thursday.
But the tale of how these two companies' stocks traded Thursday also reveals how important spin by a chief executive is in today's market. While IBM's chairman knows how to charm analysts, Hewlett-Packard's chief, Lewis Platt, does not. Lou and Lew could not be more different.
"While Gerstner usually makes his number because he knows how to guide analysts lower, Hewlett-Packard just drops the bomb," said Fred Hickey, an independent technology-stock analyst and author of The High Tech Strategist newsletter.
It has not helped that Hewlett-Packard has dropped more than one bomb recently. According to Kevin McCarthy, technology analyst at Donaldson, Lufkin & Jenrette, Hewlett-Packard has missed estimates in five out of its last six earnings announcements, often surprising analysts.
IBM, conversely, warned Wall Street as long ago as January that its first quarter might be disappointing. When it came time to post the results in April -- profits down 13 percent from a year earlier -- IBM's stock rallied more than 3 percent.
Obviously, Gerstner knows how to manage the Wall Street community well. It is a skill that is becoming more and more crucial for any major player in the computer business. A vicious price war is raging among personal-computer makers, competition is increasing among companies offering to service customers' computer systems, and problems in Asia continue to pressure PC sales.
Unit sales growth, which averaged around 25 percent annually in recent years, has slowed to 13 percent this year. While revenue growth for computer manufacturers used to average 20 percent a year, Dataquest, a technology analysis concern, estimates that sales will come in at 4 percent this year. Some think that estimate is optimistic.
The fact that investors loved IBM and hated Hewlett-Packard on Thursday is all the more interesting given how similar the two companies are. Both manufacture personal computers as well as larger mainframes, software and peripherals. Both derive a good amount of revenue -- 15 percent in Hewlett-Packard's case, 25 percent in IBM's -- from servicing customers' information systems.
Although IBM's roughly $8 billion in 1997 sales makes it almost twice as large as Hewlett-Packard, both saw profits decline around 13 percent in the most recent quarter. The two companies also have almost identical net profit margins: Hewlett-Packard's were 7 percent last year, while IBM's were 7.5 percent.
But other measures put Hewlett-Packard far ahead of IBM recently. Hewlett-Packard's revenue growth of 16 percent so far this year looks fabulous against IBM's 1.8 percent gain. While hardware sales at IBM were down 8 percent in the first quarter, PC unit shipments at Hewlett-Packard grew by 72 percent. Over the past five years, Hewlett-Packard has increased its earnings more than 26 percent annually; IBM has boosted earnings on average 15 percent a year during the same period.
The big difference to investors Thursday was Gerstner's skill with analysts. Not that he actually forecast higher earnings, mind you. McCarthy reported that Gerstner was simply encouraging analysts to think that returning to double-digit revenue growth was a possibility.
Call it the power of positive spin. |