Lenovo FQ3 16A – Always uphill.

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Now comes the hard part for Lenovo.

  • Lenovo reported a difficult results where market conditions marred what was another quarter of solid execution.
  • FQ3 15A revenues / EBIT were $12.9bn / $379m behind consensus revenues of $13.3bn but nicely ahead of consensus EBIT of $360m.
  • The PC market did most of the damage with revenues down 8% YoY despite gaining market share to an all-time high of 21.6%.
  • However, margins held steady at 5.0% despite the revenue decline.
  • Mobile had a steady quarter shipping 20.2m units just short of RFM’s estimate of 20.7m but critically came within a hair’s breadth of breaking even with margins of -0.9%.
  • Most importantly of all $393m of cash was generated which allowed the cash balance to remain healthy at $2.5bn.
  • Lenovo has executed well and licked its businesses into shape but now it must decide what it is going to do with them.
  • The market outlook is difficult this year and in this environment Lenovo needs to take market share to see growth.
  • It has two options
    • First. Take so much market share that it is able to earn better margins than its peers despite selling commoditised product.
    • Create differentiation by making a contribution to the ecosystem.
    • This is easier said than done but Lenovo’s strong position in a number of device categories could be used to create cross device experiences that actually work.
  • Furthermore, I also see an opportunity for innovation around the use case of the PC to trigger a replacement cycle.
  • I have long believed that laptops offer a sub-standard and un-healthy experience by having the keyboard and mouse physically attached to the screen.
  • Therefore, I see the possibility for a PC in a tablet form factor to replace the laptop with a 4-5 year cycle.
  • This would kick the PC market back to growth once again albeit for a limited amount of time.
  • However, for this to happen, Intel, Microsoft and the PC makers have to demonstrate to users how much better this use case is but progress to date has been very poor.
  • Laptops have been around for over 30 years and that mind-set is deeply ingrained both with users and within the companies that make them.
  • Hence, this will require strong vision and a huge marketing effort by the entire supply chain and movement here has been very slow to date.
  • Consequently, I do not see this happening soon but I remain hopeful that it will eventually come to pass.
  • For Lenovo, the outlook remains tough but it has a solid base from which to start and it has already shown that it can execute when it needs to.
  • Lenovo’s valuation remains unchallenging making it the only PC maker worth considering when looking at a position.

RICHARD WINDSOR

Richard is founder, owner of research company, Radio Free Mobile. He has 16 years of experience working in sell side equity research. During his 11 year tenure at Nomura Securities, he focused on the equity coverage of the Global Technology sector.