IBM CEO Admits Failure as Shares Plunge Over 20% on Weak Q2 Forecast
IBM's stock dropped more than 20% in early trading after the company issued a warning that its second-quarter earnings would miss analyst expectations. The technology giant projected adjusted earnings of $2.93 per share and revenues of $17.2 billion, falling short of analyst forecasts of $3.01 per share and $17.86 billion in revenue. IBM plans to release its official financial results on July 22.
CEO Arvind Krishna attributed the disappointing performance to weakness in the software and infrastructure sectors, noting that customers shifted their spending toward hardware products such as memory chips. In a letter to investors, Krishna explained that in late June, clients reallocated their quarterly capital expenditures to purchase servers, storage, and memory components to secure limited supply ahead of expected price increases. He acknowledged that while supply chain impacts were anticipated, the magnitude of this spending shift was not.
Krishna admitted the company did not adapt quickly enough, stating, "These conditions require flawless execution, and this quarter we stumbled. We did not adjust or act fast enough, and several large deals did not close on the timelines we expected, leading to most of our shortfall." The report marks a significant early setback in the Q2 earnings season for the tech sector.
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