By Keith Regan E-Commerce Times
01/22/04 8:03 AM PT
Although EMC CEO Joe Tucci said technology spending in general will rise in 2004, he did not divulge whether or not the company will ramp up hiring to meet higher demand.
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Less than two years after posting a billion-dollar quarterly loss, data storage
kingpin EMC (NYSE: EMC) has raced past earnings targets, posting a healthy fourth-quarter
profit as demand for its storage products rose.
EMC booked earnings of US$220 million despite taking some charges for its
late-2003 acquisition of two storage software firms. Revenue reached $1.86
billion, up from $1.49 billion a year ago. For the full year, EMC had sales
of $6.2 billion, up 15 percent over 2002.
Overseas growth powered the turnaround, with international
sales rising 33 percent year-over-year and accounting for more
than 40 percent of all of EMC's sales in the fourth quarter.
Execution in Style
CEO Joe Tucci credited "the strength of our broadened product
portfolio, combined with outstanding execution and an improving
global economy" for the "solid" conclusion to 2003.
EMC also put a positive spin on its expectations for 2004,
saying revenue for the full year could rise another 25 percent to more than
$7.8 billion, boosted largely by added revenue from its three 2003
acquisitions.
The results indicate a dramatic turnaround from 2001 and early
2002, when EMC was struggling to right itself after growing by leaps and
bounds during the tech expansion era. In October 2001, the Hopkinton,
Massachusetts-based company posted a loss of nearly $1 billion and
vowed to slash several thousand jobs worldwide to bring costs
in line with lower revenues.
Back in the Saddle
In addition to restructuring, EMC more recently turned its attention
to expanding by buying firms that provide services and software meant
to complement its storage systems.
In 2003 alone, the company doled out more than $3.5 billion on
acquisitions, including $1.3 billion for storage management software firm
Legato Systems, $1.7 billion for content management specialist Documentum
and $635 million for virtual-machine technology firm VMware.
Those moves all fit EMC's strategy of offering more end-to-end
services to storage customers, rather than relying on high-end storage
units to generate all of its revenue. This strategy has yet to produce
tangible results but may already be bearing fruit by restoring to EMC the
mantle of clear market leadership, John McArthur, a storage industry analyst
with IDC, said.
"EMC was being hit by the downturn, but also seeing its
storage market share eroded by competition," McArthur told the E-Commerce
Times. "People were turning to the IBMs of the world because they could
presumably do a better job of integrating storage into the overall
enterprise network landscape."
Back in Black
By promising to knit together the various software offerings
of its acquisitions, EMC has made it clear to potential customers that it
intends to remain the market leader and to remain an innovation leader in
storage, McArthur added.
However, Gartner (NYSE: IT) analyst Robert Passmore said that despite the optimism
surrounding EMC's software buys, the company still has a lot of work to do
to make the various pieces fit together into a true value-added puzzle.
"You might see even more acquisitions in order to make it all knit
together," Passmore told the E-Commerce Times. The acquisition of VMware in
particular seemed less of a logical fit than the other two buys, he noted,
and may indicate a further strategic thrust.
"If nothing else, they picked up a company with the best virtual machine
technology right now," Passmore said. "That's rarely a bad move."
Strong Balance Sheet
"Our information lifecycle management strategy is being well received by
both long-standing and new customers," Tucci said in a conference call in
reference to the acquisitions. "EMC strengthened its market position and
clearly gained share in 2003."
Despite the recent buying spree, much of which was financed
with stock, EMC ended 2003 with a stronger balance sheet than ever before,
said CFO Bill Teuber. Specifically, the company ended the year with $6.9
billion in cash and investments on its books.
Although Tucci said technology spending in general will rise in
2004, he did not divulge whether or not EMC will ramp up hiring
to meet higher demand.
"I absolutely believe 2004 will be a better year for IT," he said.