H-P's Turnaround Rings True
12/13/05 - 04:56 PM EST
Updated from 7:09 a.m. EST
It took nearly five years for
Hewlett-Packard to go from
aging but respected tech giant to over-the-hill and irrelevant dinosaur. The silver lining to such a fate is that the company's turnaround might turn out to be just as long-lasting.
H-P's stock has emerged as one of the most unlikely stars of the
tech sector for 2005, rising 34% in the past six months. Not every company with $87 billion in revenue sees that kind of a gain. And that performance isn't far behind
Google , everyone's favorite
runaway stock, which is up 39%; and it's even better than the 31% rally
seen in
Motorola , which is being hailed as the turnaround
of the year.
Compared with its peers, H-P's rally since June is even more striking.
IBM is up 19% and
Dell is down 22%. And that
adds up to an impressive first act from H-P CEO Mark Hurd. At the
beginning of 2005, if you had polled investors on which of the above stocks would be up more than 40% at almost year-end, H-P almost certainly would have lost the vote.
But that was when Carly Fiorina was at the helm. H-P's stock was
trading around $50 when Fiorina showed up with promises to bring the
aging tech giant into the 21st century. After three years, the stock was
trading below $11, and for the following couple of years, Fiorina was
never able to nurture it above the $20 mark for long -- resulting in a market cap that was two-fifths as large as when she showed up.
But is it too late for investors to get in on the recovery? Some
analysts don't think so. Cindy Shaw at Moors & Cabot Capital Markets
(which has no underwriting relationship with the company) believes H-P's strong performance in the quarter ended Oct. 31 is just the prelude to further
gains that are tied to restructuring savings and IT improvements, both
of which will play out for the next few years.