Earnings

IBM earnings: $5.81 per share, vs. expected EPS of $5.41

IBM: 2014 transformational year
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IBM: 2014 transformational year

IBM easily beat earnings expectations on Tuesday, but shares fell as the company handed in a disappointing outlook for 2015.

The world's largest technology service provider forecast full-year earnings of between $15.75 and $16.50 a share, below the $16.51 analysts had expected.

After the earnings announcement, the company's shares fell 3 percent in after-hours trading. What is IBM stock doing now? (Click here to get the latest quotes.)

During the company's earnings call, IBM CFO Martin Schroeter said "growth strategic imperatives" now represents about 27 percent IBM's of total revenue.

"We're continuing to invest in both offerings and operational capabilities," Schroeter said, adding that the company will focus on "targeted investments in mobility, security and cloud" during the fiscal 2015 year.

The company posted fourth-quarter earnings of $5.81 per share, down from $6.13 a share in the year-earlier period. Revenue decreased to $24.11 billion from $27.70 billion.

Ginni Rometty, CEO of IBM
Andrew Harrer | Bloomberg | Getty Images

Analysts had expected the company to report earnings of $5.41 a share on $24.77 billion in revenue, according to a consensus estimate from Thomson Reuters.

Global Technology Services, the company's largest segment, saw revenue decrease 8 percent to $9.2 billion. Wall Street was looking for sales of $9.53 billion, according to StreetAccount.

Global Business Services revenue fell 8 percent to $4.3 billion, missing StreetAccount expectations for $4.62 billion.

The technology and consulting company has struggled with declining revenue over the last three years, as business customers have moved away from buying big mainframe computers and traditional software that's installed on their own systems.

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IBM has been spending heavily to develop new products, such as data analytics and artificial intelligence programs and "cloud" software that IBM delivers to customers over the Internet. But those new businesses have not grown as fast as the company hoped, while revenue has continued to fall in IBM's traditional software, hardware and technology services businesses.

"We are making significant progress in our transformation, continuing to shift IBM's business to higher value, and investing and positioning ourselves for the longer term," said Ginni Rometty, the company's chairman, president and chief executive officer.

"In 2014, we repositioned our hardware portfolio for higher value, maintained a services backlog of $128 billion and achieved strong revenue growth across cloud, analytics, mobile, social and security. Together these strategic imperatives grew 16 percent in 2014 and now represent $25 billion and 27 percent of our revenue."

IBM, which announced an enterprise partnership with Apple in July, released the first fruits of that collaboration in December. The companies announced that will address specific tasks for industries such as banking and retail.

After the company's third-quarter earnings miss in October, Rometty rebuffed suggestions that IBM might benefit from splitting up. She insisted that the tech giant has a "very clear strategy" for the future.

IBM has been criticized in the past for its policy of a significant buyback plan over investment in growth, but Chief Financial Officer Martin Schroeter argued in a recent CNBC.com commentary that this is a false choice.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.