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Hewlett-Packard Q1 earnings dive 10%

The world's largest PC maker, Hewlett-Packard Corp. (NYSE: HPQ), reported a 10% quarterly drop in earnings. In other words, welcome to the recession HP. Although the PC industry has been hammered along with every other industry in the global economic recession, HP has continued to shine, all things considered, in recent quarters. Reality hit this Wednesday after the market, however.

CEO Mark Hurd, an expert at containing costs and pressing into new business areas, is the right leader at the worst time in the company's recent history. Still, can any company weather the economic and consumer spending mess in progress? For HP, analysts who were expecting $0.93 per share for the company's first quarter saw a figure of $0.75 once HP let the results hit.

Continue reading Hewlett-Packard Q1 earnings dive 10%

Hewlett-Packard (HPQ) Q3 earnings preview

Hewlett-Packard Co. (NYSE: HPQ) is set to report Q3 earnings this Thursday at 5 p.m. EST, and the consensus estimates are stating some pretty lofty goals for the world's largest tech company to hit. Right now, Wall Street has stapled a $0.65 EPS figure on CEO Mark Hurd's forehead, which represents a 20% YoY gain for the PC and printer manufacturer and marketer. Can it hit this looming and large target Thursday? Stay tuned to BloggingStocks Thursday afternoon and you'll see it liveblogged right here, along with a bunch of hopefully meaty analyst Q&A as well.

Revenues are expected to be in the range of $23.9 billion to $24.2 billion for the quarter. If HP keeps inline with the growth that many industry pundits expect, it will crack the $100 billion in sales per fiscal year barrier very soon. With all the internal activity HP has generated in the last year (like the Mercury Interactive acquisition), year-ago quarter comps are a little tricky (if even possible), but one thing is clear: HP is doing way more right things under CEO Hurd than wrong things.

In fact, every time I hear Hurd speak on quarterly conference calls, the man seems to have the perfect blend of financial, operational and sales savvy that a $100 billion CEO should have. He exudes cool confidence and you can tell he has all his plays under his jacket at all times, though he does not reveal most of them. I'm quite of the belief that he is the right person to lead HP, and from recent quarterly financial results and guidance, I stand by that opinion. We'll see if Hurd is further vindicated this Thursday, so be sure and check back at 5 p.m. right here.

Hewlett Packard Q2 earnings preview

Hewlett-Packard (NYSE: HPQ) is set to release Q2 earnings this Wednesday at 2pm PDT. The computing and services giant should have all its marbles in a row to have a very good Q2 after beating up on competitor Dell Inc. (NASDAQ: DELL) at the conclusion of 2006 and into 2007. What are the estimates? How about a $0.69 EPS figure, roughly the same estimate from the year-ago quarter? No losses here, although it will be interesting to see which parts of the company have contributed to the company's bottom line and which are dragging (if any). But with HP just bumping an already rosy outlook for Q2, the company may be sitting on cloud nine come Wednesday.

HP's current $121 billion market cap speaks highly of the company's effort to return aggressively to profitability, which has happened pretty widely under current CEO Mark Hurd. Although former CEO Carly Fiorina is receiving some of the credit for setting up some of the strategy that has enabled HP to change from a marketing company not making much headway into an operational and customer company that is, Hurd has executed on his expertise (logistics and operations) to cut costs where needed and partner aggressively with its customers (and sell hard) to ensure the company is as good as what it currently looks like.

At the same time, internal politics, spying and strife at HP seems to have mostly blown over, and the company hasn't lost focus and continues to grow at a very respectable rate. After overtaking Dell last year as the largest computer manufacturer in the world, HP became larger than IBM and claimed stake as the largest tech company in the world -- for now. Whether it remains there (or even blows past it) is certainly in Hurd's hands, but only future quarters will tell the tale. For now, HP is sitting pretty, and that position should remain come Wednesday, when I'll be liveblogging HP's Q2 conference call. Stay tuned!

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Last updated: November 11, 2009: 10:18 PM

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