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Posts Tagged ‘quarterly profits’

Global IT unit knocks BT profits

See BT’s share price

BT sign

Telecommunications firm BT has reported a sharp drop in quarterly profits, following problems at its global IT services arm.

Pre-tax profit dropped 45% to £272m in the three months to June 30 from £497m in the same period a year earlier.

BT has also revised the estimate of its pension deficit to £5.8bn, from its previous estimate of £2.9bn.

The company cut 2,300 jobs from the global IT services division during the quarter, as it tried to reduce costs.

"We are on track to deliver reductions in operating costs and capital expenditure of well over £1bn and to generate group free cash flow of over £1bn this year," said chief executive Ian Livingston.

"BT Global Services is making progress although there is still much to do," he said. The division saw revenue down 4%, as firms cut their spending on telecoms services.

Despite the problems, BT shares jumped 12% in morning trade as the results were better than analysts’ forecasts. Investors were also buoyed by chief executive Ian Livingston saying that the firm had seen a "solid start to the year".

Cost cutting

Global Services, which gives large organisations telephone and IT services, made a loss of £124m, down from a £1m profit a year ago. Overall revenue increased 1% during the period to £5.2bn.

BT’s retail revenue fell 2% to £2,110m mainly because of a reduction in calls and lines revenue, the firm said.

The firm, which has 10,000 employees, has offered staff the opportunity to take long holidays in exchange for a pay cut, to avoid to avoid redundancies.

One option available to staff is an up front sum of 25% of annual salary in return for taking the whole year off.

In May, BT said it would cut about 15,000 jobs this year, mostly in the UK, after posting an annual loss of £134m.


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Banks’ 2Q profits to be dented by bad debts, outlook improves, say analysts

Singapore’s three banks could post sharp declines in quarterly profits from a year earlier, hit by bad debt charges and lower trading income.

But analysts may focus more on the quarter-on-quarter numbers and look for forward-looking trends as the April-June period saw Singapore’s economy pulling out of its worst recession ever.

eWeek Newsbreak, July 24, 2009

Yahoo has new look, feel and user experience. Programmers basically turned the left-hand rail into an RSS feed of many of Web users’ favorite Web services and destinations, such as Facebook, Gmail, Twitter and MySpace. And whats more is that there are no installations or application searching required. Microsoft is planning to release Windows 7 to developers on Aug. 6th. They will also be offering a family pack version of Windows 7, Home Premium which will allow installation on up to 3 PCs. Apple is all over recent headlines. Apple is reporting quarterly profits and revenue exceeding Wall Street analyst predictions, however Apple is coming clean with reports that they have not been able to meet the demand of the iPhone 3GS. For BlackBerry-toting Apple users, a BlackBerry Desktop for Mac Software will be available this September. Anyone interested in being alerted to the softwares availability can head to blackberry.com and register to be updated. On July 21st, Zoho integrated its Zoho Mail application and Zoho CRM business application in an effort to improve productivity for users of the SAAS provider’s collaboration and enterprise applications. Security researchers have their eyes on the electric grid at the upcoming Black Hat security conference in Las Vegas. In separate talks, researchers will highlight some of the threats and concerns facing plans to deploy smart grid technology.
– Video Content….


Strong profits at India’s Wipro

WIPRO HQ

Indian third-largest outsourcing firm, Wipro, has reported quarterly profits 12.8% higher than a year ago, helped by cost-cutting measures.

Net income for the quarter to July was 10.1bn rupees ($210m; £128m), said Wipro, whose clients include Citigroup, Credit Suisse, and Cisco.

Wipro offers IT services such as system integration, software development and back-office operations.

In January the firm had said it faced a "tough year" in the economic slowdown.

It has repeated its cautious outlook for the rest of 2009 because of uncertainty about the strength of the global economy.

However, shares in Wipro – which employs more than 90,000 people worldwide – were up 0.7% at 461 rupees after its results announcement. </p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Apple Revenue Exceeds Analyst Expectations, iPhone and Mac Sales Up

Apple reports quarterly profits and revenue exceeding Wall Street analyst predictions, and says both iPhones and Macs experienced year-over-year growth in sales despite the economy. Apple revenue rose to $8.34 billion for the quarter ending June 27, the company reports. However, Apple saw the sales of iPods dip, a situation that Apple CFO Peter Oppenheimer attributes to market self-cannibalization thanks to the iPhone and iPod Touch.
– Apple
saw robust revenue and profits for the quarter ended June 27 and a massive jump
in iPhone sales, even as sales of its signature product, the iPod, declined by
7 percent from a year ago.
During a July 21 earnings call, Apple Chief Financial Officer Peter
Oppenheimer referred to the previo…


Keeping up with the Goldmans

Goldman Sachs’s record profits owe more to lack of competition than market recovery

TO THE survivors, the spoils. That is the cry going up at Goldman Sachs after it chalked up recession-defying—nay, record-breaking—quarterly profits on Tuesday July 14th. Minting more than $3 billion in as many months, so soon after its own near-death experience in the wake of Lehman Brothers’ demise, will enhance Goldman’s reputation as Wall Street’s overachiever. But it will also strike some as faintly obscene given the scale of public support needed to keep the firm and its peers from buckling last year.

The first half of 2009 was fertile for investment bankers as markets rebounded and companies (not least banks themselves) rushed to raise debt and equity. But none of the banks still due to report, not even a resurgent JP Morgan Chase, is expected to come close to Goldman’s blow-out performance. Having incurred smaller losses than rivals, it is still prepared to deploy risk capital where others fear to tread. …