Samsung expects around $7.28 billion in operating profits for Q3, setting another record

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Samsung has provided investors guidance ahead of its full Q3 earnings report that’s due before October 26th, and as has been the custom, the numbers are huge. It’s expecting a fourth straight record quarter with overall operating profit of 8.1 trillion won ($7.28 billion), an amount that would more than double last year’s results for the same period and clear Q2s $5.86 billion, all on sales of 52 trillion won ($46 billion). We’ll have to wait for the full report to see numbers broken down by department, but it’s safe to say that there’s a lot of Galaxy S IIIs (it ticked past 20 million last month) adding up to reach that pinnacle. Reuters and Bloomberg have predictions from various analysts on how many handsets, RAM chips and flat-panel HDTVs were sold, but if its legal battle with Apple ends in the worst-case scenario, at least we figure Samsung will have enough left over to keep the lights on.

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Samsung expects around $7.28 billion in operating profits for Q3, setting another record originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 04 Oct 2012 20:33:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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RIM posts Q2 earnings: $2.87 billion in revenue, softer $235 million loss

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RIM may have given us hope that its transition to BlackBerry 10 has turned a corner, but that doesn’t mean the dark clouds have entirely broken just yet. The company’s second fiscal quarter saw it generate $2.9 billion in revenue, a slight gain over last quarter, while it posted a net loss of $235 million — again better than expected, but not the best news it could deliver. Waterloo’s main challenge was holding on to its smartphone base. While RIM did expand the total BlackBerry user base to 80 million, its phone shipments dropped from 7.8 million to 7.4 million and were braced by shipments of just 130,000 PlayBooks, or half as many tablets as were delivered in the spring.

The sunshine is mostly found in the total picture. RIM says it’s still on track to deliver the first BlackBerry 10 phones in early 2013; while the smartphone maker is bracing for an operating loss in its ongoing third quarter, the higher revenue and reduced losses suggest to CEO Thorsten Heins that RIM is getting its fiscal house in order before BlackBerry 10 (hopefully) renews interest. Full details of the company’s financial performance are available after the break.

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RIM posts Q2 earnings: $2.87 billion in revenue, softer $235 million loss originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 27 Sep 2012 16:09:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Foxconn announces $226 million half-year net loss, blames usual suspects

Foxconn announces $226 million halfyear net loss, blames usual suspectsManufacturing behemoth Foxconn (Hon Hai) has announced a record net loss of $226 million on turnover of $2 billion for the first half of the year. Unsurprisingly, it attributed the loss to the European debt crisis, global economic slowdown and its customers “continuous struggle” for market share. While it made a big push to encourage new customers, capacity far outstripped demand. In order to stem the tide, it’s relocating some of its Shenzhen-based facilities to sites in Northern China — and it’s also in talks with carriers to become an ODM, building white-label smartphones in the same way that Huawei and ZTE do. While the loss isn’t a rosy picture, the company does have nearly $2 billion stashed in the bank, so it shouldn’t be worrying too much.

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Foxconn announces $226 million half-year net loss, blames usual suspects originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 28 Aug 2012 06:05:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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HP exceeds Q3 expectations: rakes $29.7 billion in revenue, still posts a loss

HP announces Q3 earningsTo say that HP is in a bit of a transitional period would probably be an understatement. As expected, the $8 billion hit it took over the EDS purchase severely impacted its bottom line. While revenue was down year-over-year to $29.7 billion, that five percent drop equated to a 568 percent decline in income as the company posted a loss of $8.9 billion. If not for the combined $10.8 billion in charges it was forced to absorb this quarter, the company’s net-income would have stood at $2 billion — which would have been a significant improvement over Q2’s $1.6 billion in profit. While such a staggering loss does appear bad, the non-GAAP results should give investors some hope, as the merger and layoff related charges are a one-time deal. Still, the outlook continues to be grim at the Personal Systems Group which has seen revenue drop 10 percent over the last year. The lone bright spot in the company’s line up appears to be its software division, where revenue has grown 18 percent year-over-year. CEO Meg Whitman issued a statement alongside the Q3 2012 earnings report looking to assuage nervous investors’ fears. “HP is still in the early stages of a multi-year turnaround, and we’re making decent progress despite the headwinds,” she asserts and assures that better days lie ahead. For more financial fun, check out the PR after the break and all the tables and charts you can handle at the source.

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HP exceeds Q3 expectations: rakes $29.7 billion in revenue, still posts a loss originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 22 Aug 2012 16:38:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Dell reports Q2 earnings: rakes in $14.5 billion of revenue, nets $732 million in profit

Dell reports Q2 earnings rakes in $145 billion of revenue, nets $732 million in profit

After a couple of down quarters in a row, Dell needed to come out strong in Q2 of fiscal year 2013. Well, it’s probably not as glowing a quarter as the company was hoping for, but a slight rebound in profits from last quarter should give it something to smile about. Revenue was up roughly $100 million sequentially, which translated into an equal amount of additional profit. After netting just $635 million in income during Q1, Dell banked $732 million in Q2 of 2013. Year-over-year, however, things are a little less rosy. Revenue was down eight percent and net income a worrisome 18 percent. Still, while its consumer arm continues to struggle (where revenue is down 22 percent), its enterprise services division continues to grow, raking in $4.9 billion this quarter — up six percent from the same time last year and matching its previous record. The company expects revenue to continue to fall next quarter, but expects good things from it Enterprise Solutions, Services and Software division going forward. For more financial particulars check out the PR after the break.

Update: Dell’s slide deck — partially shown above — unsurprisingly points out that Windows 8-based Ultrabooks, all-in-one desktops and tablets are on deck, but it also mentions a mysterious “converged device” segment as well. Hmm.

Continue reading Dell reports Q2 earnings: rakes in $14.5 billion of revenue, nets $732 million in profit

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Dell reports Q2 earnings: rakes in $14.5 billion of revenue, nets $732 million in profit originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 21 Aug 2012 16:18:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Acer scrapes $14.5 million in profit as it becomes world’s third biggest PC maker

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Acer rose a place to become the world’s third biggest PC maker this quarter, with net profits rising to $14.48 million, up from $11.2 million last quarter. It’s the second positive period since it ended 2011 with a $212 million loss, but the financial crises in the US, Europe, China and Asia Pacific all hampering its recovery. Like many of its PC brethren, it’s pinning hopes on Windows 8 to spark a buying frenzy, but thanks to tight margins, only expects profits to be “on par” with those it’s just announced.

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Acer scrapes $14.5 million in profit as it becomes world’s third biggest PC maker originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 17 Aug 2012 07:47:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Lenovo’s Q1 shows ‘record high’ market share, profits up 30 percent to $141 million

DNP Lenovo Q3 results

After delivering an overachieving laptop, Lenovo has delivered financial results that also exceeded expectations, producing $8 billion in revenue and $141 million net profit. Those figures are up 35 and 30 percent respectively over last year, which the company has chalked up to a higher than ever market share of 15 percent. That growth came in part from a 59 percent sales bump in emerging markets like India and Brazil, on top of a 9 percent spurt in its home market — lifting the company 24 percent in world-wide PC shipments for the quarter. Lenovo has also become the second largest player in China’s smartphone market, after Samsung, now up to a 13 percent market share. CEO Yang Yuanqing also proclaimed that, unlike other Redmond partners, he wasn’t stressed about Microsoft’s Surface tablet — and that his company had “much better hardware” than the software giant.

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Lenovo’s Q1 shows ‘record high’ market share, profits up 30 percent to $141 million originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 16 Aug 2012 06:27:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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NVIDIA Q2 earnings bounce back through Tegra: $119 million profit on $1.04 billion in revenue

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NVIDIA’s fiscal performance in its second quarter shows the rewards of patience in the mobile sphere. It just saw its profit double versus a glum first quarter to $119 million, even though the company only slightly edged ahead in revenue to $1.04 billion. In explaining the success, the company is quick to point to a confluence of events that all worked in favor of its bank account: a slew of Tegra 3 phones and tablets like the Transformer Pad TF300 made NVIDIA’s quarter the brightest, but it could also point to a much-expanded GeForce 600 line on the PC side and the shipments of the first phones with NVIDIA-badged Icera chips. The graphics guru expects its revenue to climb more sharply in the heat of the third quarter as well — between the cult hit Nexus 7 tablet and a role as a major partner for Windows RT, NVIDIA has at least a temporary license to print money.

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NVIDIA Q2 earnings bounce back through Tegra: $119 million profit on $1.04 billion in revenue originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 09 Aug 2012 17:43:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Warner Music Group says streaming services now account for 25 percent of digital revenue

We’ve been seeing plenty of evidence that streaming music services like Spotify, Pandora and Rdio are pulling in more folks than ever, and we now also have a good idea of how that growth is affecting the bottom lines of music labels. In its third quarter earnings report, Warner Music Group revealed that streaming services now account for a full 25 percent of the digital revenue for its recorded music group. As AllThingsD reports, that translates to 8 percent of Warner Music’s total revenue for the quarter, or about $54 million in all. What’s more, that growth in streaming appears to be a net plus for the company all around, as it’s apparently not cutting into traditional sales of digital music (at least, not yet), and is also bigger than the decrease in sales of physical media.

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Warner Music Group says streaming services now account for 25 percent of digital revenue originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 09 Aug 2012 15:41:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Olympus hangs $57 million loss on austerity, strong yen and declining compact camera market

Olympus hangs $57 million loss on austerity, strong yen and declining compact camera market

Olympus is reporting a $56.7 million loss for its first quarter of 2012. While its coveted medical imaging arm remains profitable, its life-science and industrial unit suffered thanks to corporate belt-tightening. Unsurprisingly, its low-end compact camera market is shrinking, but sales of its OM-D E-M5 ILC increased by 50 percent, offsetting some of the losses and reducing operating losses from $89 million last quarter to $19 million in this one. Like many of its Japanese rivals, it’s also found a strong yen has stifled its return to productivity, a trend that isn’t likely to change soon.

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Olympus hangs $57 million loss on austerity, strong yen and declining compact camera market originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 09 Aug 2012 05:16:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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