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<A HREF="http://www.djurdjevic.com/Bulletins/financial/99-12.htm">Armonk's 
Fudge Factory (Apr. 9, 1999)
</A>
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FINANCIAL

Analysis of IBM's 1998 Annual Report

Armonk's Fudge Factory

One Way to Throw Pursuers Off the Trail Is to Keep Changing It

PHOENIX, May 18 - One way to throw pursuers off your trail is to keep 
changing it all the time. IBM has become a master at it when it comes to 
financial reporting. Every year since Lou Gerstner took over the reins, 
the Big Blue has made some changes to its financial disclosures and/or 
Annual Reports. But at no point in the past, has the Armonk fudge 
factory put out so much fudge in lieu of facts, as was the case with its 
1998 Annual Report. 

In some cases, even the (revenue) figures for the same categories on 
page 64 and on page 86 didn't balance. In other cases, brand new fudge 
accounts were created and called business segments (e.g., "Enterprise 
Investments"). In some situations, entire reports DISAPPEARED, such as 
the international revenue, assets and net earnings breakdowns. Almost 
all business segments were renamed. And even if two were not - servers 
and software - their definitions were changed, and therefore, past 
figures had to be restated.

We've said before that IBM has turned financial engineering into a new 
line of business (see Annex Bulletin 97-30, 7/21/97). With its 1998 
Annual Report, Armonk has turned financial reporting into abstract art, 
where only the artist himself knows for sure what the various brush 
strokes are supposed to mean.

But the top prize for 1998 goes to the Armonk's financial artist who 
came up with the idea of reporting the "funny money" along with real 
revenues. In an instant, IBM became a $91 billion-company. All it took 
was adding $9.4 billion of "internal revenues" to the amount earned from 
customers, and then calculating the pretax profits on the total of the 
two (i.e., including the "funny money").

And the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) calls that kind of 
reporting "financial disclosure?" 

Maybe the SEC folks have been taking lessons from their colleagues at 
the Treasury, which has allowed the Federal Government to create $2.25 
trillion out of thin air (see "What's a Trill Here, a Trill There...?", 
Annex Bulletin 99-11, Mar. 18, 1999). So Armonk still has ways to go 
with its "puny" $9.4 billion fudge factor, compared to the financial 
artistry of the Washington money wizards. 



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Yet Wall Street has lapped up all the fudge IBM slathered over its 
financial results, unperturbed by a possibility that the rest of it may 
not be as sweet. Nor were the casino players concerned about the fact 
that it is now nearly impossible to reconcile IBM's 1998 business 
segment information with prior years' figures. They've pushed the IBM 
stock to a new record high of $246 on May 13, up almost 50% since the 
time the 1998 Annual Report was released. 

Which once again underlines the fact that business and stock performance 
nowadays can be as different as night and day. All it takes is for the 
IBM chairman to utter two magic words - Internet and e-business - and 
the Big Blue's market value soars by the tens of billions of dollars.

Business Segment Analysis

At the risk of appearing downright "uncool," a term so "cool" which even 
IBM's chairman used in his (well written!) letter to the shareholders, 
let us try to analyze IBM's business segment results the old-fashioned 
way, by removing some of Armonk's fudge.

IBM Gerrymandering. What IBM did with the new business segment reporting 
is nothing short of gerrymandering. At least that's what such 
artificial, or artful - take your pick - redrawing of business 
boundaries would be called in politics. The overall objective was 
obviously to cover up the stumps, and to overstate the size of the 
growing parts of the business.

By merging the shrinking (-8%), but highly profitable, IBM maintenance 
business, with the fast growing (+22%), but marginally profitable, IT 
services operation, the company created a hybrid called IBM Global 
Services (GS). The IBM GS hybrid gives the impression of being both the 
fastest growing (+15%), and the most profitable business in IBM's 
"business portfolio," as Armonk likes to call its divisions, pandering 
to Wall Street terminology even with its operations.

The key words in the above sentences are "gives the impression." For, 
when you scrape off the Armonk fudge, what you see tare totally 
different businesses, with different metrics and different business 
results. 

IBM's IT services is a booming $24 billion operation with a pretax 
margin of a mere 5.5% (and even that is a HUGE increase from the 2.2% 
equivalent margin in 1997). The maintenance, on the other hand, is a 
mere $5.2 billion-business segment, but with a pretax margin of 41%. 

As a result, maintenance accounts for 62% of the IBM GS hybrid's 
published 1998 pretax profit - $3.8 billion (including Armonk's fudge; 
or $3.4 billion with the fudge scraped off by Annex). Without the 
maintenance, the IT services' $1.3 billion pretax profit makes it only a 
distant No. 4 within IBM's " business portfolio," behind servers, 
software and maintenance.

But the IBM GS hybrid gets 100% of the credit and looks like No. 1 in 
the eyes of the uninitiated, since the 62%-38% maintenance/IT services 
breakdown is never shown anywhere in the IBM 1998 Annual Report. 

And that's not misleading the "Ma & Pa" investors? 

Illusion of Growth. Furthermore, of the 14 business segments grouped in 
seven gerrymandered IBM lines of business, nine are declining 
businesses, and two are basically flat. Together, these less than 
exciting businesses account for nearly half of IBM's revenue (48%). 
That's another FACT which you will not find in the IBM 1998 Annual 
Report.

What you will see is a lot of boasting about IBM's growth businesses - 
the IT services and OEM hardware. What you won't see is IBM disclosing 
that its OEM hardware pretax profits have plummeted by an estimated 65%, 
even as its revenue surged by 22%. And that its "Technology" segment, 
one of the 1998 gerrymandered groups, experienced a 41% drop in pretax 
profits. And one reason you won't see it is because IBM slapped on $4.6 
billion of internal revenue fudge to this group's revenues, obfuscating 
the real world issues.

Server Troubles? "Everybody" knows by now that IBM's server businesses 
are in trouble, right? Wrong. 

Battered and forlorn; shrinking and scorned, the IBM servers still 
contribute more than double the amount of money to the company's pretax 
profit than the suddenly "cool" businesses, like the IT services ($2.7 
billion vs. $1.3 billion).

In fact, the S/390 alone, despite its declining $5.5 billion revenues, 
is still more profitable than IT services $24 billion business ($1.4 
billion vs. $1.3 billion in pretax profits).

PC Troubles. If you want to find out the real trouble spot at IBM, look 
no further than its PC business. Of course, we've been telling you that 
at least since August 1992 (see "The 'New' IBM: Robbing Peter to Pay 
Paul," Annex Bulletin 92-44, Aug. 28, 1992).

[Come to think of it, the preceding could be an appropriate headline for 
this Annex Bulletin, too. Which only goes to show us that how much the 
"new" and the "old" Armonk are alike. And why it is, therefore, only a 
matter of time, before they end up at the same precipice].

The "new news" about IBM's PC business is that even after all the Armonk 
fudge is applied to it, this second largest part of Gerstner's "business 
portfolio" lost about $1 billion in 1998 (as we said it had lost in 1992 
- see Annex Bulletin 93-26, May 1, 1993). 

And have been losing money on its PCs every year since... Including in 
the last two years (1996-1997) which had been hailed by Armonk's 
"pontificators" as a "PC recovery" period.

And it was. In an weird way. IBM went from losing billions of dollars on 
PCs, to "only" a few hundred million. Like the person who keeps hitting 
his head against the wall only a couple of hours a day, instead of 10, 
Armonk's relief must have been immense. Which perhaps explains its 
overly exuberant characterization of its PC "recovery."

"Lou's Kitty." And then there's "Lou's Kitty," possibly the most 
egregious example of gerrymandering and misleading the investing public. 
Of course, you won't find any such terms in the IBM 1998 Annual Report. 
Instead, you will see a new business segment called "Enterprise 
Investments" (already mentioned earlier in this report).

What is this new business? EI "provides a spectrum of initiatives in IT 
solutions, supporting the hardware, software and services segments of 
the company," reads the vague explanation in the 1998 Report.



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"Supporting" other businesses? At a pretax LOSS of $60 million in 1998; 
$900 million in 1997, and $800 million in 1996? In other words, it's 
"Lou's Kitty;" a "stealth" R&D account; a playpen for the Armonk Emperor 
masquerading as a bona fide "business segment." 

All of which brought back some long time memories.... 

In a December 1994 meeting at his office in Armonk, Jerry York, the then 
IBM CFO, told this writer that the company had just instituted a new 
"budget process," under which operating divisions were asked to 
contribute money to a special R&D account, "sort of a 'Gerstner kitty'," 
York explained. 

Here's an excerpt from this writer's business diary for Dec. 13, 1994:

"Some 'kitty!' It will have 'several hundred million dollars' in it. JY 
said that its purpose are the kinds of investments which have new 
business potential, not just the enhancements to the existing lines 
which the divisions make. 

'What makes you think that Armonk can spend that money better than the 
divisions?' I asked. 

'I am not saying we can,' he replied. 'We'll pass the successful 
projects on to the divisions once they are ready for market.'

'Do you have some sort of an Investment Council to make such decisions?'

'For the time being, Jimmy Cannavino and I do it,' JY said. 'But in 
early January, we'll make a presentation to Gerstner, after which we may 
establish a more formal body to decide on such investments."

"Jimmy Cannavino," like York, a former IBM executive, was back then the 
company's chief technology officer. And "Lou's Kitty" has evidently 
mushroomed in the last four years to multibillion-dollar proportions. 
And has so far generated several billion dollars of pretax losses, 
according to IBM's own disclosures.

Is that how the Big Blue bought its "phenomenal" success in the 
"e-business," which, according to Gerstner, generated online sales of 
$38 million a day during December 1998? What the IBM chairman may have 
"forgotten" to tell his shareholders, and what "Lou's Kitty" money 
losing statistics suggest, is how many (tens, hundreds, billions of...?) 
dollars has IBM wasted so far generating all this self-serving 
"e-business" hype? 

Happy bargain hunting!

Bob Djurdjevic

Are you eager to learn more? If so, please call 602/956-8586. 

Also check out Annex Bulletins "Wag the Big Blue Dog" and "Solid Third 
Quarter Despite Trying Circumstances."

Volume XV, No. 99-12
April 9, 1999 

Editor: Bob Djurdjevic
Published by: Annex Research;
e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 

5110 North 40th Street, �����Phoenix, Arizona 85018
TEL: (602) 956-8586 �������FAX: (602) 952-2058 

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Aloha, He'Ping,
Om, Shalom, Salaam.
Em Hotep, Peace Be,
Omnia Bona Bonis,
All My Relations.
Adieu, Adios, Aloha.
Amen.
Roads End
Kris


FROM PHOENIX, ARIZONA

After 56 straight days of trying to serve God's truth in NATO's war against
a sovereign country (YU), we returned today to what we do for a living -
analyzing the business results of multinational computer companies, and
consulting for their top executives on global strategies.

Here's a sample of our work for those of the TiM readers who are interested
in business topics.  The subject piece, "Armonk's Fudge Factory," dissects
the IBM 1998 Annual Report:

http://www.djurdjevic.com/Bulletins/financial/99-12.htm

Bob Dj.

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Bob Djurdjevic
TRUTH IN MEDIA
Phoenix, Arizona
e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Visit the Truth in Media Web site http://www.truthinmedia.org/ for more
articles on geopolitical affairs.




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