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Shares of Armonk, N.Y.-based IBM rose $1.63 to $112.27 in extended trading after the earnings report. The stock had closed regular trading at $110.64, up 3.2 percent on the day. IBM has improved its gross profit margin in 19 of the last 20 quarters. That shows it has aggressively controlled costs while finding ways to squeeze more money from its products. Gross margin improved more than 2 percentage points to 45.5 percent of revenue in the latest quarter. Gross margin is a company's profit on each dollar of revenue, once the costs of making its products are stripped out. IBM's last hiccup in this area was the third quarter of 2007. "Big Blue appears recession-proof," Annex Research analyst Bob Djurdjevic wrote in an e-mail. IBM's services and software divisions were the stars in the latest quarter, while hardware lagged. Pretax income rose 23 percent in services and 24 percent in software. IBM says those divisions can prosper in down times because they help make customers more efficient. Businesses are "spending in areas where they get good returns on their investments," Loughridge said. More discretionary buys are being put off, he said. Hardware, which includes mainframe computers and servers -- things that are easier for companies to postpone in rough times
-- posted a 26 percent plunge in revenue to $3.9 billion. IBM's services signings, reflecting revenue that mainly will be booked in future quarters, fell 5 percent to $14 billion in the second quarter. However, analysts also closely eye IBM's services backlog, which is the total value of work IBM has under contract and has yet to complete. One reason the backlog can fall is if customers are renegotiating contracts to cut costs. IBM said its backlog stands at $132 billion, $6 billion higher than at the end of March.
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