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Topic: Growth Stocks

SYMANTEC CORP. $23 – Nasdaq symbol SYMC

SYMANTEC CORP. $23 (Nasdaq symbol SYMC; Aggressive Growth Portfolio, Manufacturing & Industry sector; Shares outstanding: 696.6 million; Market cap: $16.0 billion; Price-to-sales ratio: 2.3; Dividend yield: 2.6%; TSINetwork Rating: Average; www.symantec.com) makes software that protects computers from viruses and intruders, including the popular Norton anti-virus program. It also sells products and services, such as e-mail filtering and data backup, to businesses.

In July 2005, the company paid $13.2 billion for Veritas Software, whose software stores and protects information in large databases. The deal cut the company’s reliance on selling software to consumers and helped it compete with larger computer-services firms, like IBM.

Big acquisition posed challenges

However, the integration of Veritas did not proceed as smoothly as Symantec hoped. As a result, the company confused its customers with too many products and pricing structures.

The recession also cut Symantec’s revenue by 2.7%, from $6.1 billion in 2009 to $6.0 billion in 2010 (fiscal years end March 31). However, revenue turned around in 2011 and rose to $6.9 billion in 2013.

Earnings fell 15.3%, from $1.3 billion in 2009 to $1.1 billion in 2011. Due to fewer shares outstanding, earnings per share fell at a slower rate of 9.6%, from $1.57 to $1.42. Earnings rebounded to $1.3 billion, or $1.77 a share, in 2013.

Under a new restructuring plan, Symantec will simplify its products and cut 5% of its workforce. The company expects to pay $275 million in severance and other costs in fiscal 2014. Symantec is also re-organizing its salesforce to focus on specific products instead of a more generalized approach. One sales team will serve existing clients, and another will pursue new contracts.

Higher earnings on the way

Symantec did not say how much these moves will save it. However, they should help the company increase its gross profit margin (gross profits as a percentage of revenue) from 25.7% in fiscal 2013 to at least 30% in 2015.

The plan should also free up cash for research. Symantec spent $1.0 billion (or 14.7% of its revenue) on research in 2013, up 4.4% from $969 million (or 14.4% of revenue) in 2012. This spending hurts Symantec’s earnings but helps it quickly respond to new computer viruses and other online threats. That’s particularly important as more businesses shift their sensitive data to a cloud-computing environment.

The company’s strong balance sheet will also help it complete this transition. As of March 29, 2013, its long-term debt was $2.1 billion, or just 13% of its market cap. Symantec also held cash and investments of $4.7 billion, or $6.80 a share.

New dividend adds appeal

Thanks to its improving outlook, Symantec began paying a quarterly dividend of $0.15 a share in June 2013. The annual rate of $0.60 yields 2.6%. The stock is also attractive at 13.4 times the company’s projected fiscal 2014 earnings of $1.72 a share.

Symantec is a buy.

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