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Lenovo sees profit more than doubled
LENOVO Group Ltd, the world's No. 4 personal computer maker, announced yesterday its net profit in the first quarter more than doubled as a result of a one-off gain from the sale of its cell phone unit and strong revenue from the Chinese market.
Lenovo posted a net profit of US$140 million between January and March against earnings of US$60 million a year ago. The first quarter net income included a US$65 million gain from selling its money-losing mobile phone business. The result beat expectations of US$129.2 million by analysts polled by Reuters.
The revenue, excluding the mobile handset business, rose 13.5 percent year on year to US$3.7 billion, higher than the 10 percent revenue growth projected by Citigroup's analyst Jim Liang.
"Lenovo continued to demonstrate strong execution of our strategies in the past quarter, achieving the eighth consecutive quarter of profitable growth," Lenovo's chairman Yang Yuanqing said in a statement.
A slowdown in technology spending in the United States is affecting enterprise-oriented PC firms, like Dell Inc and Lenovo, which bought the Thinkpad brand of laptops from IBM. Meanwhile, Lenovo's consumer PC business is also facing pressure from bigger rivals like Hewlett-Packard Co and Acer, which has purchased Gateway.
In China, Lenovo's revenue was US$1.29 billion in the quarter, a jump of 18 percent year on year.
Lenovo is the top sponsor of the coming Beijing Olympic Games and will use the event to launch PCs and laptops that have the Olympic torch design etched on them, Du Ruochao, Lenovo's general manager of East China region, said at a torch bearers' welcome conference in Shanghai yesterday.
Lenovo's share price dropped 2.86 percent to HK$6.45 (92 US cents) yesterday while the Hang Seng Index lost 1.64 percent.