Virtualization software market leader VMware has managed to stay ahead of a
stubborn worldwide recession, reporting in an earnings call April 22 an
increase of 7 percent in its overall revenues and a 62 percent increase in net
income for the first quarter of 2009.
VMware, 84 percent of which is owned by storage giant EMC,
also reported a profit of $60 million, or 18 cents per share, up from $43
million and 11 cents per share in the first quarter of 2008. The company has
banked a bit more than $2 billion in cash on hand, to go with $917 million in
deferred revenue.
However, VMware executives warned that because of an increasingly
cost-conscious market, they expected sales to be flat—or even lower—in the
second quarter, compared with the second quarter of 2008.
In July 2008, VMware reported second-quarter sales of $456.2 million—well below
the $500 million that analysts are expecting for the current quarter. The
company's revenue forecast sent its stock price down about 15 percent to under
$29 in after-hours trading.
Overall, VMware's revenues for the first quarter were $470.3 million, an
increase of 7 percent from the first quarter of 2008. The increase was led by
the company's services and maintenance revenues of $213 million, up 48 percent
over the previous year, CFO Mark Peek told a telephone conference of investors,
analysts and journalists.
However, VMware took a hit on licensing income, banking 13 percent less than a
year ago at $257 million.
The company's business mix is shifting along with the economy, Peek said, with
services revenue comprising 45 percent of total revenues, compared with 33
percent in the first quarter of 2008. Services revenue comes mostly from ongoing
maintenance involving previously licensed deployments.
"Customers have little appetite for any CAPEX
[capital expense] outlays for new projects. Although virtualization has a high
ROI … it is frequently accompanied by hardware purchases and professional
services engagements," Peek said.
VMware President and CEO Paul Maritz said
during the call that VMware added 11,000 new customers and that "austerity
measures" to keep operational costs in line were key factors in the
company's success in the first quarter.
"While there are some people promising signs of renewed life [in the
economy] in the United States,
customers maintaining a tight rein on any new spend[ing]," Maritz said.
"If there is a bright spot anywhere, it is likely to be confined in the
very near term to the federal sector. The government has money and is spending
it.
"However, Europe, in particular, remains depressed;
Asia is more promising, but we're still investing there.
While our growth will be good on a relative basis, it will be small on an
absolute basis, given from where we are coming."
VMware's domestic revenues for the first quarter grew 8 percent to $244.1
million from the first quarter of 2008. International revenues improved 6
percent to $226.2 million from the first quarter of 2008.
VMware on April 21 launched a major product refresh of its front-line ESX virtualization
server, changing the name to vSphere
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