Oracle Grows Profit But Misses Expectations

Oracle has posted good profit growth in its latest quarterly results, but the figures fell short for a third straight quarter of meeting Wall Street analysts’ expectations.

Nonetheless, the co-presidents of the Redwood City, California-based full-service IT hardware and software provider, Safra Catz and Mark Hurd, said the company is seeing improvement in several markets.

Profit Growth

Oracle posted a net profit of $2.19 billion (£1.4bn) in the first quarter of the 2014 fiscal year, a respectable 8 percent increase over the same period a year ago. That number gave shareholders a solid 47 cents (£0.29) per share.

Total revenue meanwhile was $8.37 billion (£5.2bn), up a modest 4 percent over the year-ago period and exceeding Wall Street projections by about 3 cents (£0.01) per share.

While the revenue total fell $100 million (£62m) below Oracle’s own sales forecast of $8.47 billion (£5.3bn), some analysts saw good news in the big picture.

“We would characterise this quarter as a sigh of relief, given the weakness we have seen the last few quarters for Oracle,” FBR Capital Market analyst Daniel Ives told the San Jose Mercury News.

“While the company still has some wood to chop to get back to better growth prospects, we believe investors will walk away from these results feeling better about Oracle’s growth potential going forward. This is also a good barometer for the rest of IT spending and speaks to a modestly better spending environment heading into year-end.”

Divisional Performance

On the investor/analyst conference call, Catz said that the company was particularly pleased with its software sales, which amounted to $6.1 billion (£3.8bn), or about 75 percent of total sales, in the quarter – translating to 8 percent growth year over year.

The company reported new software licence income at $1.7 billion (£1bn), up 6 percent of the year-ago quarter. The slow pace of selling new licenses had been a target of criticism by analysts last quarter.

Overall hardware sales were down sharply at $669 million (£414m), which is a legitimate cause for concern among investors and analysts alike. Oracle invested $7.4 billion (£4.6bn) to buy Sun Microsystems in 2010 and has yet to see a substantial profit as a result of that deal.

Oracle reported $39 billion (£24.2bn) in cash and securities and said its quarterly cash flow of $6.1 billion (£3.8bn) was nearing that of a major market rival. “We’re now on the cusp of generating more free cash flow than IBM,” Catz said.

Oracle, as do many West Coast-based IT companies, announced its earnings at 2 pm Pacific time after the stock market close, when the company’s shares rose 61 cents, or nearly 2 percent, to $33.87 (£21.01).

However, in after-hours trading, its shares retreated by about 3 percent.

What do you know about the Cloud? Find out with our quiz!

Originally published on eWeek.

Chris Preimesberger

Editor of eWEEK and repository of knowledge on storage, amongst other things

Recent Posts

EU To Drop Microsoft’s OpenAI Investment Probe – Report

Microsoft to avoid an EU investigation into its $13 billion investment in OpenAI, after EC…

2 hours ago

US Provides Assurances For Julian Assange Extradition

As President Biden 'considers' request to drop Julian Assange extradition, US provides assurances to prevent…

4 hours ago

Tesla To Ask Shareholders To Reinstate Elon Musk’s $56 Billion Package

Tesla shareholders to be asked to reinstate Elon Musk's $56 billion pay package, days after…

19 hours ago

Telegram To Reach One Billion Users Within Year

Catching WhatsApp? Billionaire founder of Telegram claims encrypted platform will reach one billion users within…

19 hours ago

Judge Dismisses Some Harm Claims Against Meta, Zuckerberg

Good news for Mark Zuckerberg as judge dismisses some claims in dozens of lawsuits alleging…

21 hours ago

Google Begins Removal Of California News Ahead Of Proposed Law

Consequences of Assembly Bill 886. Google begins removing California news websites from some search results

22 hours ago