Dell Tops Views in 4Q Despite 25% Profit Decline

Dell (NASDAQ:DELL) reported a 25% decline in fourth-quarter earnings Tuesday on weaker enterprise revenue and PC sales, but managed to post a beat on both the top and bottom lines.

During the quarter, a 7% decline in its large enterprise business to $4.7 billion and a 20% decrease in desktop were partially offset by a 5% improvement in server revenue and a 42% jump in Dell networking.

The Round Rock, Texas-based computer hardware maker revealed operating income of $698 million, or 30 cents a share, compared with a year-earlier profit of $931 million, or 43 cents.

Excluding one-time items, Dell said it earned 40 cents, topping average analyst estimates in a Thomson Reuters poll by a penny.

Revenue for the three-month period was $14.3 billion, down 11% from $16 billion in the year-earlier period. The results beat the Street’s view of $14.12 billion.

“We continued to execute our long-term strategy in Q4,” said Dell Chief Financial Officer Brian Gladden. “We also continued to generate strong cash flow from operations of $1.4 billion in the quarter.”

Excess cash allowed the company to invest nearly $5 billion in new capabilities and intellectual properties last fiscal year, including in assets like Quest, SonicWall and AppAssure, Gladden said.

Shares of Dell ticked slightly higher in extended trade.

Load more..