Dell reported strong results from business units located outside of the U.S. in the first quarter, leading to solid increases
in revenue and net income on the back of solid growth in storage and mobile products, the company said Thursday.
First-quarter revenue was $13.4 billion, up 16 percent from $11.5 billion in revenue during last year's first quarter and
meeting the expectations of analysts polled by Thomson First Call.
The increase in revenue was driven largely by a 21 percent increase in sales to businesses and consumers outside the U.S.,
said Kevin Rollins, chief executive officer, on a conference call following Dell's earnings announcement. Customers outside
the U.S. now account for 42 percent of Dell's total revenue, he said. Shipments in Europe, the Middle East, and Africa increased
by 26 percent compared to last year, while shipments in Asia-Pacific, including Japan, increased 27 percent.
Dell needs to stick to that 16 percent growth pace to reach its stated target of $80 billion in yearly revenue by the end
of 2008 or 2009. Rollins pointed to the company's efficient operating model and expanding global reach as two factors that
will help it achieve that goal.
Net income was $934 million, up 28 percent from last year when the Round Rock, Texas, company recorded $731 million in net
income. Earnings per share were $0.37, on target with analyst estimates.
Dell is trying to shed its PC-maker image and present itself as a more diversified IT vendor. The company's April analyst
meeting focused mainly on emerging businesses like services and printers, both of which had an excellent quarter, Rollins
said.
The company's services business recorded $1.1 billion in revenue during the quarter, a 30 percent increase compared to last
year, Rollins said. Services growth was even stronger outside of the U.S, he said.
Shipments of Dell-branded printers were up 77 percent compared to last year, Rollins said. The company now believes it has
about 10 percent of the fast-growing color laser printer market, and about 18 percent of the inkjet market, he said.
Executives from Hewlett-Packard, the market leader in both of those categories, earlier this week characterized Dell's growth
in printer market share as coming at the expense of profits. Rollins acknowledged that Dell's printer business only breaks
even at present, but said that it has performed better than expected and predicted that the business will eventually generate
profits.
Dell's core PC business had a solid quarter, in sync with recent industry trends of slow desktop growth and strong notebook
growth. Desktop revenue increased 6 percent compared to last year, while revenue from mobility products was up 22 percent.
The desktop PCs that made Dell an industry powerhouse are steadily shrinking as a percentage of the company's overall revenue.
Revenue from desktops accounted for 40 percent of Dell's total first-quarter revenue, down from 44 percent last year.
At the April analyst meeting Rollins had expressed slight concerns about Dell's first-quarter PC business based on the results
of February and March, but business picked up in April, he said Thursday.
For the second quarter, Dell expects revenue to run between $13.6 billion and $13.8 billion, an increase of between 16 percent
to 18 percent from last year's second quarter. Earnings per share are expected to be between $0.37 and $0.39, the company
said.