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"I think they did a good job," said Brian Marshall, an analyst for Gleacher & Co., in an interview. "My only issue is the sustainability of that improvement." Marshall said Dell's guidance indicates margins will decline this year. Component prices are bound to rise, and Dell remains heavily dependent on selling hardware
-- PCs and server computers. The company is doing the right thing by making acquisitions in technology consulting and data storage that bring faster growth and better margins, the analyst said. "The issue is: Dell is yesterday's company. And they're $60 billion in revenue. To turn a $60 billion ship, you can't do that overnight," Marshall said. For the full year, Dell said net income increased 84 percent to $2.64 billion, or $1.35 per share, from $1.43 billion, or 73 cents per share in the prior year. Revenue rose 16 percent to $61.49 million from $52.9 million. For the current quarter, Dell said it expects revenue to decline slightly from the fourth-quarter level. Analysts are looking for revenue of $15.5 billion in revenue. For the fiscal year, Dell said it expects revenue to grow 5 percent to 9 percent, or about $64.6 billion to $67.0 billion. Analysts are forecasting annual revenue of $64.2 billion. Shares jumped 80 cents, or 5.8 percent, to $14.71 in aftermarket trading after the earnings were released. In the regular session, the stock lost 18 cents to $13.91.
[Associated
Press;
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