Intel breaks records and tosses out red ink
The
poor economy put a hurt on many technology firms including industry
giants like Microsoft and Intel. As the economy starts to turn
around, many enterprises and consumers are starting to spend on
technology again.
Intel reported its best
ever first quarter results in April with profit of $2.3
billion working out to 43 cents per share. As good as the numbers for
Intel were in Q1, Q2 is even better. Intel has unveiled its Q2 2010
earnings and reported the best
quarter in the history of the company.
Intel posted
revenue of $10.8 billion for Q2 2010, which is a gain of $466 million
compared to Q1 2010 and up $2.7 billion compared to Q2 2009 during
some of the darkest days of the economy. Operating income for Q2 2010
was $4 billion, a gain of $533 million compared to last quarter and a
gain of 100% from Q2 2009.
Earnings per share for Q2 2010 were
51 cents, up 8 cents from last quarter and up 58 cents from Q2 2009.
If Intel excludes the big $1.45 billion fine levied against it in Q2
2009, the growth is still impressive with revenue up 34% and earnings
per share up 183%.
"Strong demand from corporate
customers for our most advanced microprocessors helped Intel achieve
the best quarter in the company's 42-year history," said Paul
Otellini, Intel president and CEO. "Our process technology lead
plus compelling architectural designs increasingly differentiate
Intel-based products in the marketplace. The PC and server segments
are healthy and the demand for leading-edge technology will continue
to increase for the foreseeable future."
Highlights for
Q2 2010 according to Intel include Atom CPU and chipset revenue
growth of $413 million. The ASP for microprocessors was up slightly
as well according to the chipmaker. The gross margin for the quarter
was 67%, 3% higher than Intel had predicted. Intel also made
predictions for Q3 2010 with revenue of $11.6 billion plus or minus
$400 million.
"Well, there may be a reason why they call them 'Mac' trucks! Windows machines will not be trucks." -- Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer
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