IBM reported quarterly earnings that beat analysts' expectations on Tuesday, though revenue fell short as demand for its software services and tight cost management offset the effect of a stronger dollar on the technology and consulting company.
After the earnings announcement, the world's largest technology-services company's shares (IBM) fell in extended-hours trading.
IBM, which has shifted its focus to higher-margin software and services from tech products, posted third-quarter earnings excluding items of $3.62 per share, up from $3.28 a share in the year-earlier period.
Revenue eased 5 percent due to a negative currency impact of almost $1 billion, decreasing to $24.7 billion from $26.16 billion a year ago.
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Analysts had expected the company to report earnings excluding items of $3.61 a share on $25.36 billion in revenue, according to a consensus estimate from Thomson Reuters.
In a conference call following the earnings report, IBM said the first two months of the quarter were stronger than the third and that the weakness was in global business services and software — in North America and growth markets. In software, a few big deals fell out, which accounted for some of the revenue shortfall, the company said.
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