Information Age: News, analysis & insight for IT & business leaders

 

HP considered breaking up, says CEO Fiorina

10 February 2006  

Computer giant Hewlett-Packard has revealed that it has considered splitting its business, amid pressure to do so, but will continue to resist calls to break up.

8 December 2004 Computer giant Hewlett-Packard has revealed that it has considered splitting its business, amid pressure to do so, but will continue to resist calls to break up.

At the company's analyst meeting in Boston, Massachusetts this week, Carly Fiorina, CEO of HP, admitted that the management board had held talks about a possible breakup on at least three occasions, but each time unanimously decided to keep the company together.

In June 2004, Merrill Lynch analyst Steven Milunovich published a report calling for HP to be broken up. Shareholders would receive best value for money it HP concentrated solely on its lucrative printing and imaging business, he said.

HP's printing unit accounted for 30% of its 2004 sales but more importantly 80% of profit.

Alternatively, said Milunovich, HP should consider splitting the company into a consumer division and a corporate division.

But Fiorina is adamant that HP is better kept as a single entity. "Fundamentally, we have completed this picture. We are now at the point where we have the right strategy, the right portfolio of products and we're in the right markets," she said.

Questions over its composition look set to hang over HP, at least in the short to medium term. HP has yet to produce the financial performance it predicted prior to its mammoth acquisition of rival Compaq. Adding to this pressure, rivals such as IBM, appear more willing to sell off less profitable business units. IBM has just completed the sale of its PC unit to rival Levono.


Comments 

There are currently no comments on this article

People who read this also read...

 
Advertisement

White Papers

Read article

Developing ios Solutions for Business

Whitepapers

Quickly develop and deploy custom iPad and iPhone solutions. With FileMaker Pro, iPad and iPhone solutions can be prototyped and completed in hours or days versus weeks or months. No iOS application programming or design experience is required.

Read article

IDC Spotlight: Access Control and Certification

Whitepapers

Read this brief for best practices on managing user access compliance.

Read article

GPS World

Whitepapers

Is the PREMIER global media brand serving the exploding world of positioning and navigation for OEM, commercial and consumer applications.

More
div class="banner">