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Topic: Blue Chip Stocks

IBM is expanding its cloud revenue

Improving sales of analytics software and cloud computing helped to partially offset lower mainframe computer sales for this industry giant, which nonetheless saw its revenue decline 4.2% in the most-recent quarter.

Those rising cloud computing revenues will help the company continue to raise its dividend each year. It has, in fact, paid dividends continuously since 1916.

True Blue Chips pay off

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IBM (New York symbol IBM; www.ibm.com) is one of the world’s largest computer companies, with operations in over 175 countries.

Excluding one-time items, IBM earned $2.827 billion in the three months ended June 30, 2019. That’s down 0.2% from $2.834 billion a year earlier. However, due to fewer shares outstanding, earnings per share gained 2.9%, to $3.17 from $3.08.

Revenue in the quarter declined 4.2%, to $19.16 billion from $20.00 billion. Lower sales of mainframe computers offset steady gains from the company’s newer businesses like analytics software and cloud computing. (Cloud systems let users access computer programs online and store files on remote servers.)

IBM’s $34 billion acquisition of Red Hat Inc. should further spur those new businesses.

Red Hat is a leading developer of software for cloud-based computing systems. Its programs use the open-source Linux operating system, which lets them adapt to a wide variety of computer-hardware systems.

Red Hat should add about $3.4 billion to IBM’s annual sales.

Blue Chip Stocks: Cloud computing should offset mainframe computing decline

As of June 30, 2019, IBM’s long-term debt was $58.4 billion. That’s a high, but still manageable 49% of its market cap. It also held cash of $46.4 billion, but used $34 billion of that to buy Red Hat in July.

The company is cutting about 2,000 jobs in a round of layoffs, as it continues to reshape its business.

IBM had 350,600 employees before the layoffs, the fewest number of employees since 2005.

The shift is needed to offset declining demand for its traditional mainframe computers and consulting services.

Meanwhile, the company currently has about 25,000 open job postings worldwide. That’s because it aims to keep expanding in cloud computing (which let users access files and programs stored on remote servers over the Internet) and analytics (using IBM’s Watson artificial intelligence technology) to process increasingly large amounts of data,

IBM has also raised its quarterly dividend by 3.2% with the June 2019 payment. Investors now receive $1.62 a share instead of $1.57. The new annual rate of $6.48 yields a high 4.8%. The company has paid dividends continuously since 1916 and has raised the annual rate each year for the past 24 years.

Recommendation in Canadian Wealth Advisor: IBM is a buy.

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