Archive for the ‘Rock Republic’ Category

Whitman faces a real test as she attempts to pull together a conglomerate beset by growing pains and managerial strife. She is HP’s third CEO in a year and a half. Though HP is the world’s largest information technology company by revenue, the company has had a hard time deciding whether it wanted to grow even bigger or start getting smaller.

“HP has valuation on its side and expectations are low; however, we believe this turnaround story will take time to play out, and the darkening macroeconomic environment is only likely to hinder this cause,” White wrote in a note to clients.

Meanwhile, HP has spent tens of billions of dollars expanding into those more profitable areas of technology services and software. But cracking those businesses means facing entrenched enemies such as IBM Corp. HP faces serious questions about its competitiveness at the high end of those markets.

Revenue fell 3 percent to $32.12 billion, but that beat the $32.05 billion analysts expected.

For the full fiscal year, HP expects to earn at least $4 per share, excluding one-time items. Analysts expected $4.53 per share on that basis.

For the fiscal first quarter, HP expects earnings of 83 cents to 86 cents per share, excluding one-time items. That’s far less than the $1.11 per share analysts expected.

The latest earnings report showed HP’s net income fell 91 percent mostly because of write-downs and charges for Apotheker’s decision to kill off HP’s fledgling tablet and smartphone lines. So staying on track will be a challenge.

The latest quarterly numbers, reported Monday after the market closed, beat Wall Street’s subdued expectations. But the forecast for the 2012 fiscal year left something to be desired. HP’s shares fell.

The company earned $239 million, or 12 cents per share, for the quarter ended Oct. 31. That’s down from $2.54 billion, or $1.10 per share, a year earlier.

The results show a company being pulled in two directions at once. The tensions underline a key challenge for Whitman, who is best known for building eBay Inc. from its startup days into a Silicon Valley icon and now must wrestle with one of technology’s oldest companies amid management dysfunction and economic malaise.

Excluding one-time items, HP earned $1.17 per share, more than the $1.13 analysts expect on average, according to FactSet.

The forecast was lower than most analysts’ targets. HP said it was being “cautious,” citing turmoil in Europe amid the debt crisis there, soft consumer spending and weakening spending by businesses.

SAN FRANCISCO Hewlett-Packard Co.’s first earnings report with Meg Whitman as CEO highlights the troubles she faces in setting a new course for the besieged company.

The profit decline in the latest quarter was caused in large part by $3.3 billion in charges for HP’s earlier decision to kill its tablet and smartphone businesses, as well as other write-downs and acquisition costs. Revenue in three of HP’s biggest divisions personal computers, printers and ink, and servers and networking fell as well.

Apotheker, who succeed Hurd, was ousted in September over his botched handling of key initiatives, particularly the plan to sell or spin off the PC division, which leaked early to the press and which Whitman has reversed.

Analyst Brian White with Ticonderoga Securities called the outlook “weak” but said the stock has some appeal in investors because of its previous declines. Indeed, the stock has fallen 40 percent since CEO Mark Hurd was ousted last year in an ethical scandal.

HP’s shares briefly rose in extended trading, after the results were reported. But momentum turned against the company as investors digested the weaker outlook, and the shares fell 28 cents. In regular trading Monday, the stock fell $1.13, or 4 percent, to close at $26.86.

Whitman’s first major decision as CEO was deciding to keep the $40 billion-plus personal computer business, which her predecessor, Leo Apotheker, had wanted to sell or spin off. That business is pulling HP toward the low end of the technology market. PCs notoriously carry thin profit margins, and customers are spending less on them amid challenges from rival technologies, mainly smartphones and tablets. HP sees PCs as an inexpensive way to get its sales hooks into corporations and sell more expensive technology.

Purchase info: Buy it here.

In the while, twin-o-mom was pleased when our accessories editor, Hannah Deely, suggested these $33 “Cartier” watches that look beautiful damn cool. And hello: They lovingly named the replica the “Carter” watch. Hilarious!

This season, rose gold namely the fashionable underdog in metals and this particular replica makes us chuckle.

I adore me a Cartier see — do not get me bad — but this mom has apt disburse for day camp and soccer for two, so certain entities are not in the ration.

I understand, I know…it’s no the same…the precision, the details, the matters, etc. But as this minute, I can get the see now and for fewer!

STORY: Bravo Exec Andy Cohen Scores Seven-Figure Advance for Memoir (Exclusive)

At fewest a dozen stars of the assorted Real Housewives reality shows have faced real estate miseries in the quondam 3 years, for reported along the Zillow real estate website.

Atlanta's Lisa Wu Hartwell lost her Duluth, Georgia, home to the bank in 2009. 

 

Their property difficulties comprise bankruptcy, foreclosure, short sales, eviction, threats of eviction and default. Some reflecting trends in the broader real estate market have simply had to sell their houses by significant price reductions.

To discern the whole list, go to Zillow.com.

 

STORY: Bravo Special apt Address Real Housewives Suicide (Report)

 

 

The real estate problems have buffet Bravo cast members in Orange County, Atlanta, Washington, D.C. and Atlanta.

STORY: 'Real Housewives of Beverly Hills' Will Not Be Pushed Back

Orange County’s Tamra Barney shirked foreclosure above her Ladera Ranch house with a short sale in 2009. The house sold at a 30 percent reduction of her $1.6 million querying price.

And New Jersey’s Teresa Giudice and her husband Joe, "were almost $11 million in debt when their Towaco, NJ family underwent foreclosure. The couple filed for bankrupty and fortunately, are facing their money problems in credit counseling, some of the other Housewives could behalf from," writes Zillow’s Erika Riggs.

Foreclosures, evictions, defaults and more have plagued numerous of the Bravo stars.