Dell earnings posts
FeedPosted Feb 16th 2011 8:30AM by Jason Raznick (RSS feed)
Filed under: Before the Bell, Earnings Reports, Deals, Dell (DELL), Family Dollar Stores (FDO), Genzyme (GENZ)

U.S. stock futures are higher Wednesday morning as Sanofi-Aventis (
SNY) agreed to purchase Genzyme (
GENZ) and Dell (
DELL) reported upbeat quarterly
earnings.
Futures on the
Dow Jones Industrial Average gained 30 points to 12,232 and S&P 500 futures rose 4.20 points to 1,330.50. Nasdaq 100 futures gained 5.50 points to 2,387.
U.S. stocks closed lower Tuesday, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average dropping 0.34% to close at 12,227.
Continue reading U.S. Stock Futures Up After Dell Reports Upbeat Earnings
Posted Feb 13th 2011 12:30PM by Trey Thoelcke (RSS feed)
Filed under: Earnings Reports, Forecasts, Dell (DELL), Marriott Intl'A' (MAR), Nordstrom, Inc (JWN)
We're well into the quarter now and the earnings reports continue to roll out.
This week, Dell (DELL) highlights a handful of results from tech companies. Analysts surveyed by Thomson Reuters are looking for fourth-quarter earnings of 37 cents per share from the one of the world's top PC purveyors. That's up from 28 cents per share during the same period a year ago. Dell also is expected to report its revenue grew 5.5% year over year to $15.7 billion, for the three months that ended in January.
Continue reading Week in Preview: Mid-Quarter Earnings (DELL, SJM, MAR, JWN)
Posted Aug 29th 2008 1:23PM by Georges Yared (RSS feed)
Filed under: Earnings Reports, Forecasts, Bad News, Apple Inc (AAPL), Dell (DELL), Hewlett-Packard (HPQ), Stocks to Sell

I have been following
Dell (NASDAQ:
DELL) since its 1988 IPO. No question, this was a mega-gamechanger company for years. The vision of Michael Dell creating this company from his University of Texas dorm room is inspiring. The dorm room became the new substitute for company creation as the
Hewlett-Packard (NYSE:
HPQ) garage served beforehand. Dell was a great American success story---but the key here is WAS.
Dell remains a sell. I wrote back in early 2007 that this company is doomed because of the total commoditization of its product line. Desk tops, laptops and servers were judged more by pricing than by functionality. Hewlett-Packard took market share away from Dell these past five years, and even the return of founder Michael Dell to the CEO role was not going to save this company.
Continue reading Once again: DELL is a sell
Posted May 28th 2008 9:40AM by Brian White (RSS feed)
Filed under: Earnings Reports, Dell (DELL), Hewlett-Packard (HPQ)

When
Dell, Inc. (NASDAQ:
DELL) releases
quarterly results Thursday how will it do? Dell has managed to quickly enter the consumer retailer market, which has helped it stave off the more valiant
Hewlett-Packard Corp. (NYSE:
HPQ) from running away with just about ever retailer PC sale these days. But investors are bound to say, "that was yesterday -- what have you done for me today?"
Analysts are expecting the company to report earnings of 33 cents per share on revenue of $15.66 billion, according to Thomson Reuters. Although Dell announced a $1 billion share buyback plan just a few months ago, it needs to all it can to not let its stock price implode. The growth may be over (permanently), and the brand may not be the premier name it once was. Add that to the fact that the competition (most notably H-P) enjoys every cost savings Dell once did, and the picture become way less rosy.
Does Dell
have any angles left? From a fundamental PC selling standpoint, it's hard to make that argument. In terms of Micheal Dell's famous comment that
Apple, Inc. (NASDAQ:
AAPL)
should be sold off in pieces and money returned to shareholders. My, my how the tables have turned. Still, Dell is not going anywhere fast and its stock price could be languishing in the dust for quite some time.
Posted Aug 29th 2007 7:02PM by Brian White (RSS feed)
Filed under: Earnings Reports, Dell (DELL), Hewlett-Packard (HPQ)
Dell, Inc. (NASDAQ: DELL) is set to release Q2 financial results tomorrow in what is probably one of the more highly anticipated earnings releases in quite a while. Just a few weeks ago, the company concluded its own internal financial investigation into possible financial shenanigans and the results included over $150 million in quarterly restatements stemming back to 2002. The official SEC investigation is not through yet.
Dell's reports tomorrow will shed some light on the fight the computer maker has had since January of this year to try and catch up to larger rival Hewlett-Packard Co. (NYSE: HPQ), which reported a touch under $25 billion in revenues for its latest quarter. Has Dell seen increased shipments of PCs with its newer and colorful laptop systems? Is the Wal-Mart retail relationship going well for the company? These questions and many more are on tap for tomorrow's call.
Analyst expectations are for Dell to report an earnings figure of 30 cents per share on revenue of $14.63 billion. The company should be able to make that number despite supply problems that have set back newer and colorful Inspiron notebook shipments (according to industry watchers). It will be interesting to see if any analyst questions come up about this week's acquisition of smaller PC rival Gateway, Inc. (NYSE: GTW) by Taiwan's Acer. Stay tuned tomorrow for liveblogging coverage of the Dell Q2 webcast and call.
Posted Mar 7th 2007 10:45AM by Brian White (RSS feed)
Filed under: Bad News, Products and Services, Competitive Strategy, Dell (DELL), Hewlett-Packard (HPQ)
Dell Inc.'s (NASDAQ: DELL) rather spectacular fall from grace in its most recent fiscal year is now a matter of record. I am fascinated by how such a PC powerhouse like Dell could stumble so badly. I'll cross off the battery recall fiasco since that was way more Sony's fault than Dell's (even though Dell took the heat). That consumer recall gets a lot of press, but it has nothing to do with Dell other than a black eye (and a loss of trust on Dell's QC for consumer products). But when Dell did not even have
anything beyond a press release for its latest quarterly results, its reputation became further sullied.
Let's get into accounting irregularities that have required an SEC investigation, allegations of illegal $1 billion per quarter kickbacks to Intel beyond "marketing rebates," the loss of interesting consumer design, retail losses to Hewlett-Packard Company (NYSE:HPQ), and Dell's customer support quality levels which are only slowing improving. Which to take first? Well, since most of these have been talked about
ad infinitum already, I'll
let the critics speak for themselves. In a nutshell: Dell has had massive problems recently and all the changes in upper management in the last 45 days or so are meant to help fix that. Company founder Michael Dell is back at the daily helm along with a bunch of new blood. It will take time though -- there is no overnight turnaround here.
But, how is Dell going to sell more products and grow margins? It saw a 17% decline in desktop PC shipments for its last quarter and only a 2% increase in notebook shipments -- very poor performance. Meanwhile, HP is apparently selling everything it can on retail shelves -- somewhere Dell is nowhere to be found, of course. What are Dell's most profitable PCs? Are they in the consumer or business segment? If they're in the consumer segment, Dell needs to be more than a phone call or website away -- retail will be almost required, I would think. If you are a Dell investor, do you agree?