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The printing group was combined this year with HP's PC operations in a move to streamline the company. The PC business "is doing as well as its can," Hooper says. "When that discipline is applied to printing, where HP has much better market share, we should see results improve for the company overall." Another reason to like HP stock at its current low price of about $14 per share is its quarterly dividend of 13.2 cents. That's a dividend yield of 3.7 percent, an attractive return during these times of puny interest rates. DELL: DIVERSIFYING BEYOND THE PC The Texas company made its name selling PCs. But profit margins in the consumer PC business have been shrinking for years. Meanwhile, Dell has been pressured by the popularity of tablets and smartphones, and the reluctance of many companies to buy new workplace PCs amid a slow economic recovery. As a result, Dell has been moving beyond PCs with recent acquisitions to expand in cloud computing, data storage and technology consulting. Those moves may not pay off for years. Greg Estes, lead manager of the Intrepid All Cap Fund (ICMCX), believes investors are ignoring the No. 3 global position in PC sales of a company that generated $61 billion in revenue last year. "The bottom line is Dell still sells lots of laptops and desktops," Estes says. "And when I go into any office, guess what's on the desk? It's not an iPad, it's a desktop." Brian Frank, of the Frank Value Fund (FRNKX), notes that Dell generates less than 5 percent of its operating income from consumer PC sales. Computer sales and services to businesses and governments generate far bigger profits for Dell, and the company's recent acquisitions will improve its standing with those clients, Frank says. Another appeal? The company paid its first-ever quarterly dividend this month, 8 cents a share. With the stock trading at around $9.25 per share, the yield is a sizable 3.5 percent. Frank believes the current stock price assumes the PC business is in terminal decline. "I don't think the PC business is going away anytime soon," he says. "The consumer PC side is definitely under pressure, but there is still a place for the PC in the workplace." ___ Questions? E-mail investorinsight@ap.org
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