Home  |  Newsletter | Feedback | Advertise - Online  | Help

Google
Web dqindia.com
Search by issue  | Sitemap

• Visit pcquest.com to know all about the business benefits of IT infrastructure outsourcing • Ad : Play and Plug ERP by IBM

 
Home > Editorial

HPs Big, Fat Services Move
Prasanto Kumar Roy
Thursday, May 22, 2008
Print Comment Email DiggDigg DeliciousDel.icio.us RedittReddit TwitterTwitter

On May 13, HP announced that it was likely to buy services giant EDS for over $13 bn.

The deal, if it goes through (by year-end), would be a coup for HP. And it would reshape the tech landscape.

For a start, it brings HP into close competition with IBM.

HP is the worlds largest IT company, at $104 bn in 2007, versus IBMs $99 bn. But those revenues mostly come from (lower-margin) products such as PCs. Much of HPs bottom line comes from consumablesink and toner cartridgesand not enough comes from services. So a big services acquisition was always on the cards (since Carly Fiorina tried buying PwC). And EDS, established 1962, defined the outsourcing business.

IBM made the transition from products to mostly services several years ago, spinning off its PC business to Lenovo. That helped make it rather profitable. In 2007, it had $10.8 bn net income (11%), versus HPs $7.3 bn (7%). IBM picked up a tenth of the $550 bn global tech services pie: its top player.

Prasanto K Roy
pkr@cybermedia.co.in

HP remained a product company, with three divisions: PSG (personal systems), IPG (imaging and printing) and TSG (technology solutions). It is through TSG, which sells servers and storage, that HP ramped up services. Sort of. Its reached #5, well behind IBM, with 3% share ($16.6 bn) of the pie.

With the $22 bn EDS, HPs services will jump to second place with a 7% share, ahead of Fujitsu and Accenture.

In India, HP has done better, with services at 11% of the Rs 9,663 crore pie for 2006-07, but here again, services got IBM India 37% of its Rs 3,380 revenues (Dataquest estimates).

Owning EDS will also let HP compete better with Dell globally, and especially in the USA. Dell and EDS (both Texas-based) are strong allies, and bid for big contracts together, one providing computers, the other services.

So globally, at least two tech majors, Dell and IBM, would worry about this deal. So would Indian services majors such as TCS and Infosys, with the global top threeIBM, HP and Accenturebuilding up a mammoth India presence. HP would add to its nearly 30,000 India employees not just EDS, also MphasiS, which is 60% owned by EDS.

Will it work for HP? Any megamerger is tough, especially when it involves buying such terribly different culture and a slow-growth giant, and if synergies are to be leveraged for cost savings. The culture clash would beat anything HP encountered with Compaq. (EDS would stay a distinct entity, though, called EDS: An HP company.)

But unlike when HP bought Compaq, the synergies are at least a lot clearer with EDS.

Page(s)   1  

Print Comment Email DiggDigg DeliciousDel.icio.us RedittReddit TwitterTwitter



ZTE:Leading CDMA Technology


Extraordinary Networks:Freedom of Choice






Collective Intelligence @ Work

Analysts: Guiding Stars or Shepherds?

How's the 'pitch' looking?

What's your Everest?

 

 

 

 

 

 

Magazine Subscription | Sitemap | Contact Us | About Us | Advertising Print | Mediakit Print | jobs@cybermedia

Other CyberMedia web sites
  [Voice&Data]  [CIOL]  [PCQuest]  [Living Digital]  [IDC India]
  [CIOL Shop]  [DQ Channels]  [DQweek]  [CyberMedia Events]
  [Cybermedia Digital]  [CyberMedia India]   [Cyber Astro
  [Global Services Media ]  [BioSpectrum]  [BioSpectrum Asia]