Lenovo Q2 16A – Storm rider

Reply to this post

RFM AvatarSmall

 

 

 

 

 

Lenovo is nicely weathering both the PC storm and its restructuring.

  • Lenovo reported Q2 16A results that beat expectations but still recorded losses as the re-organisation of its acquired server and smartphone businesses took their toll.
  • Q2 16A revenues / net profit were $12.2bn / LOSS $714m compared to estimates of $11.8bn / LOSS $808m.
  • This is a hefty loss for a company with only $3bn on the balance sheet but the good news is that cash flow from operations was a healthy $599m and net cash flow was negative $304m solely due to the repayment of bank borrowings.
  • The loss was due to one-time restructuring and provisions of $923m which when stripped away reveal an encouraging picture.
  • Market share in PCs grew again to 21.2% and tablets were flat outpacing the tablet market decline of 12.6%.
  • It was these market share gains that led to revenue coming in better than expected which combined with steady gross margins allowed losses to be lower than expected.
  • Lenovo continues to aim for 30% market share in PCs, $5bn in enterprise revenues and mobile to be profitable in 1-2 quarters.
  • I see Lenovo’s development in two stages.
  • First: Steady the ship and return to steady profitability and cash flow.
  • Second: Execute a strategy to bring margins out of the commodity PC / Android level of 2-4% to something much more respectable.
  • This will not be easy as it means that Lenovo must:
    • Either gain substantial market share so that it is meaningfully bigger than its competitors and thereby gain scale advantages,
    • Or differentiate its products such that users are willing to pay a premium to own them compared to similar products from the competition.
  • Differentiation in PCs and Android devices is extremely difficult, but not impossible, and will require substantial further investment on the part of Lenovo.
  • I think Lenovo understands this dilemma but whether it has the management depth to take a bold step into the ecosystem remains to be seen.
  • The good news is that the valuation of the shares does not demand more than commodity margins and I think that returning to the steady state of low margin offers some upside.
  • There may be further upside in the long-term if Lenovo can achieve scale of differentiation.
  • Consequently, Lenovo is the only PC maker (other than Microsoft) that I would consider being involved with.

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.