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Lenovo’s revenue beats estimates on PC arm

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BEIJING: Lenovo Group Ltd posted its fastest pace of revenue growth in more than two years by pushing higher-priced computers and expanding its datacenter business in a stabilisin­g PC market.

The world’s second-largest PC vendor reported a 69% plunge in net income to US$33mil in the three months ended March as it grappled with rising expenses. Sales however jumped 11% to US$10.6bil, surpassing the US$9.8bil projected and marking its first double-digit percentage increase since late 2015.

Lenovo, which became the world’s worst performing technology stock as its smartphone­s struggle for relevance and it loses ground to rivals such as HP Inc, has focused on burnishing the premium veneer of its bread-and-butter PCs while moving more deeply into the lucrative gaming segment.

The company is trying to reverse the years of declining growth that got it kicked off Hong Kong’s benchmark index this year.

The company’s shares climbed as much as 4.4% after it released results.

The stock is set to leave the Hang Seng Index next month after plunging 56% since it was added to the gauge in 2013.

“Lenovo managed to grow sales in PC as shipments went flat,” said Qian Kai, an analyst with CICC.

“The revival of the datacentre business is a good sign, but the size of this part remains small.”

But “it remains unclear how they can maintain the momentum going while keeping product pricing at a reasonable range.

It’s interestin­g to see how Lenovo will balance margins and scale of shipments,” he added.

Revenue from PCs and devices climbed 16% to US$7.7bil in the quarter – the highest in four years, Lenovo said in a statement. But higher costs, for instance of memory chips, pushed the division’s profit 2% lower.

Lenovo continues to be weighed down by the poor performanc­e of a subscale mobile segment despite an improved datacentre business, Johnathan Ritucci, an analyst with Bloomberg Intelligen­ce, wrote ahead of the release.

“Its US PC franchise strategy also needs to be confronted quickly, as HP continues to gain segment share.”

The company keeps pushing back the deadline to turn around the smartphone business, a mix of Lenovo and Motorola branded products. This month, the company merged its mobile and PC businesses under chief operating officer Gianfranco Lanci, a Lenovo veteran who helped to build company’s presence in Europe.

Chairman Yang Yuanqing counts on a turnaround kicking in by early 2019. “We resumed double-digit revenue growth with strong profitabil­ity improvemen­t,” Yang said in a statement.

“Lenovo has truly entered a new phase of growth.”

 ?? — Reuters ?? Yang: We resumed double-digit revenue growth with strong profitabil­ity improvemen­t.
— Reuters Yang: We resumed double-digit revenue growth with strong profitabil­ity improvemen­t.

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