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Dell second-quarter profit drops 17 per cent and stock plunges Print E-mail
Written by Jessica Mintz, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS   
Thursday, 28 August 2008
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Computer maker Dell Inc. said Thursday its second-quarter profit fell 17 per cent, hurt in part by price cuts. Both earnings and margins fell short of Wall Street estimates, and Dell shares plunged.

For the three-month period that ended Aug. 1, Dell's earnings dropped to US$616 million, or 31 cents per share, from $746 million, or 32 cents per share in the same period last year.

Excluding amortization and business realignment charges, Dell said it would have earned 33 cents per share. Analysts surveyed by Thomson Reuters had forecast a profit of 36 cents per share.

Investors sent Dell shares down $2.55, or 10 per cent, to $22.66 in after-hours trading. Earlier, the stock dropped 42 cents to close at $25.21.

Sales rose 11 per cent to $16.4 billion, ahead of Wall Street's view for $15.9 billion in sales. And Dell said operating expenses fell to their lowest point in six quarters.

But the company slashed computer prices too sharply in the quarter, offsetting its attempts to cut costs and its eroding gross margin. Analysts had hoped Dell's margin would hold steady at last quarter's level of 18.4 per cent, but instead it sank to 17.2 per cent.

In a conference call, chief financial officer Brian Gladden said Dell made "strategic pricing" changes in Europe, the Middle East and Africa to speed up growth. The company also deferred some services-related profit from that region to a later quarter.

"If I look at the situation in the second quarter, we would have to say it was more self-inflicted," chief executive Michael Dell said in a conference call.

"Whenever you're restarting growth, what I can tell you is, it's an imprecise process. (There were) some parts of the business where we were probably too aggressive."

Sharon Cross, an analyst for Cross Research, said that Dell bulls were hopeful that if the company was aggressive in pricing, but managed to cut costs somewhere in the supply chain, the company could still pull off flat margins.

"That obviously is not the case," said Cross, who rates the stock a "sell."

Cross said she thought Dell cut prices to some extent in other regions, too. Gladden indicated that Dell is also taking aim at back-to-school shoppers with lower prices.

Dell said the company would reach its goal of 8,900 jobs cut in the current third quarter. Since the target was set last year, Dell has already cut more than 8,500 workers, excluding the impact of acquisitions.

The company sees continued conservatism in IT spending in the U.S., which has extended into Western Europe and several countries in Asia. Demand also is impacted by currency fluctuations
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Last Updated ( Thursday, 28 August 2008 )
 
 
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