Wednesday, February 20, 2013

Dell profit plummets 31 percent as investors ponder $24 billion buyout

SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - Dell Inc on Tuesday reported a 31 percent drop in profit, hurt by a shrinking consumer business, as investors weighed founder Michael Dell's offer to buy out the world's No.3 maker of personal computers.

Michael Dell, teaming up with private equity firm Silver Lake and software maker Microsoft, is offering $13.65 a share to buy out the company, but at least four of its largest investors are opposed to the $24.4 billion deal.

The founder and CEO did not join in management discussion of the results in a conference call with analysts, given his participation in the buyout. Dell executives also did not comment on the buyout.

Analysts said Dell's rapidly shrinking business and murky prospects in a declining PC market may make the buyout a more attractive option for investors tired of waiting for a turnaround.

Since news of the proposed buyout emerged in January, the stock has gained almost 30 percent - a rally that analysts say may evaporate should the deal fall through.

On Tuesday, the company said sales across every business line, except servers and networking, declined in the fiscal fourth quarter. Revenue from servers and networking climbed 18 percent, driven by its datacenter business and revenue from recently acquired companies such as Quest Software and Sonic Wall.

Overall, however, revenue slid 11 percent.

"There isn't anything really to be super excited about," Brian Marshall, analyst with ISI Group, said, adding that declining revenue and profit doesn't bode well for the company.

"The (buyout) deal makes sense. It will go through," he said. "They will probably have to pay a little more than $13.65 to get it done but at the end of the day there aren't a lot of options out there."

The company gave no financial forecast for fiscal 2014 or the fiscal first quarter, citing the proposed buyout.

The company reiterated that it plans to file a proxy statement with the U.S. securities regulators on the merger agreement but made no other reference to the buyout in its earnings release.

Shareholders representing almost 14 percent of Dell shares not held by Michael Dell have now said they will vote against the deal. The billionaire, who created the computer maker from his college dorm room in 1984, holds a roughly 16 percent stake and needs a majority of shareholders - excluding him - to vote for the deal.

Some are holding out hope for a higher offer. Peter Misek, analyst with Jefferies, said a bumped-up offer of about $15 per share was a "fair price."

"The better-than-expected results means that's the fair thing to do, in our opinion, is to raise the bid to a price where current shareholders reap some of the rewards while the take-private consortium enjoys the prospect of a respectable return," Misek said.

SLIDING PC SALES

Dell posted net income of $530 million, or 30 cents a share, in its fiscal fourth quarter on revenue of $14.3 billion. That came in slightly higher than the average analyst estimate of revenue of $14.12 billion, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.

Excluding certain items, it earned 40 cents a share, compared to an average forecast for 39 cents.

Shares of the company edged 0.5 percent higher in after-hours trade to $13.87, from a close of $13.805 on the Nasdaq.

Dell has said it plans to stick to its current turnaround strategy to diversify away from personal computers following the buyout.

The company, once regarded as a model of innovation in the early 2000s for pioneering online ordering of custom-configured PCs, missed the big industry shift to tablet computers, smartphones and high-powered consumer electronics such as music players.

It is also had to defend its market share against hard-charging Asian rivals like Lenovo.

Dell has lost 40 percent of its value since last year's peak and is trying to reinvent itself as a seller of services to corporations - an internal overhaul that some analysts say may be better conducted away from public scrutiny.

The company, was also hurt by the slide in holiday-season sales of personal computers for the first time in more than five years despite the launch of Microsoft Corp's new Windows 8 operating system.

Dell's worldwide PC shipments fell nearly 21 percent to 9.48 million in the last three months of 2012 from 11.97 million in the same period a year ago, according to IDC.

The bright spot for Dell was its growing sales of its enterprise solutions and services revenue, which rose 6 percent to $5.2 billion, and accounted for 34 percent of revenue for fiscal year.

In contrast, consumer revenue plummeted 24 percent to $2.8 billion, underscoring the plight of the broader PC market while sales to large corporations declined 7 percent to $4.7 billion in the quarter.

Dell said it was seeing growth in tablets and low-end desktops and notebooks. It ended fiscal 2013 with $15.3 billion in cash and investments.

(Reporting by Poornima Gupta; Editing by Dale Hudson, Bernard Orr)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/dell-profit-plummets-31-percent-investors-ponder-24-000041939--sector.html

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Dragon Quest 10 Wii U hits Japan on March 30

Tue, Feb 19, 2013 | 05:57 GMT

6 Best Businesses to Start for 2013 | Small Biz Daily

6 Hot Business Startup Ideas

By Rieva Lesonsky

If you want to start a business in an industry with lots of business startup potential, you?ll want to check out IBISWorld?s list of? the hottest industries for business startup ideas for 2013 and beyond. I picked 6 of them to spotlight here. What do today?s hot business startup ideas have in common? Many of them are online-only, which means they?re inexpensive to start as long as you (or a partner) have some tech know-how.

  1. Social Network Game Development: The growth of social networking has led to a demand for games, with mobile devices being the biggest growth area for this industry. Could your company develop the next Angry Birds?
  2. Online Shoe Sales: After books, clothing, accessories and shoes are the second-largest category of items people buy online. Online purchasing is growing; if you can differentiate yourself and market your site effectively, your business startup could be a shoe-in.
  3. TV & Home Theater Installation Services: Not all services are offered online. If you have electronics and installation skills, you could profit in this industry. Rapid changes in home entertainment have created a need for help installing and upgrading systems?so if you can keep up with the technology, this could be the business for you.
  4. Travel Agencies: Hard to believe, right? IBISWorld says the travel industry has been recovering since 2010, but these aren?t your grandfather?s travel agencies. Instead of brick and mortar storefronts, they?re online services. There?s a good chance of being acquired by a bigger company if your business takes off.
  5. Translation Services: Globalization has given rise to growth in this industry. One hot area is helping companies translate their websites and online marketing materials to attract global customers, and to provide customer service to those clients. This is still a human-intensive business, so the growing number of non-native English speakers who can serve as employees is good news.
  6. IT Security Consulting: Growth in ecommerce, mobile internet access and the BYOD trend at work have led to huge demand for IT security services to help companies avoid security breaches. As the economy picks up and businesses invest more in technology, this area will grow.

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Source: http://www.smallbizdaily.com/11036/6-hot-startup-business-ideas/

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Friday, February 15, 2013

QuickBooks Online For iPad Isn?t A Boring Accounting App ? It?s A Simple CRM

QuickBooks Online for iPadOver a decade after porting its QuickBooks desktop software to the web, Intuit is finally addressing the needs of its small business owner user base with the launch of a version of the QuickBooks application for iPad. The app has been designed from the ground-up to take advantage of the tablet's screen size and feature set. But more notably, it's helping to refocus the QuickBooks platform from being solely thought of as a tool for back office accounting. With the iPad launch, QuickBooks is becoming a CRM solution for small businesses.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/bMnCC0eHpa4/

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Hugh Bonneville presides on 'Downton Abbey' finale

NEW YORK (AP) ? The third season of "Downton Abbey" ends this Sunday with a bang.

Exactly what that bang is, we're not going to say, in deference to the maybe half-dozen "Downton" fans who still don't know the shocking truth.

The larger point remains that after Sunday's "Masterpiece Classic" (airing at 9 p.m. Eastern on PBS), viewers must suffer "Downton" withdrawal until next season.

But until then, we'll have our memories.

And what a season this has been! The beloved valet Mr. Bates was sprung from jail and a trumped-up murder charge to begin married life with his bride, the plucky lady's maid Anna. Robert Crawley, Earl of Grantham, has gotten Downton Abbey back on its feet financially with an able assist from his son-in-law and presumptive heir, Matthew Crawley. Matthew wed his true love, Lady Mary Crawley. But another of Robert's daughters, Lady Sybil, died tragically during childbirth.

Through it all, Robert's mother Violet, Dowager Countess of Grantham (played by the sublimely scene-stealing, Emmy- and Golden-Globe-winning Maggie Smith) delivered a barrage of withering, hilarious rejoinders to virtually every narrative twist.

"I remember my very first scene with her in Season One," says Hugh Bonneville, who plays Robert, lord of the manor. "She's complaining about the new electric lights, and suddenly she put her fan up to her face to shield herself from 'the glare,' and spent the entire scene like that. It was so funny, and I was just, 'All right! There's no point in my even being here. She's just marched off with the scene!'"

Now, as then, "Downton" is a plush, penetrating peek into the lives of the aristocratic Crawley family and their household servants in an English castle of a century ago. With a cast that also includes Michelle Dockery, Elizabeth McGovern, Dan Stevens, Jim Carter and Brendan Coyle, the series this season has drawn an average 11 million viewers each week while spurring another surge of "Downton"-mania, even from first lady Michelle Obama, who pulled strings to get episodes of the new season before it premiered.

"Downton" has even been parsed for its political underpinnings. Last month, Fox News host (and native Brit) Stuart Varney declared that "Downton" celebrates rich people, who "in America today are reviled. They're dismissed as fat cats who don't pay their fair share." Yet on "Downton" the rich people are "generous," ''nice," ''classy" and "they've got style," he said, "which poses a threat to the left, doesn't it?"

It is rare when public television is accused of threatening left-wing orthodoxy, especially on "Fox & Friends" (whose co-hosts Gretchen Carlson and Brian Kilmeade expressed surprise to learn the show isn't called "Downtown Abbey"). But "Downton" has a way of engaging people, both the 99 percent and the 1 percent alike.

And, yes, as the wealthy, patriarchal Lord Grantham, Bonneville does indeed exude classiness and, at crucial moments, generosity.

But that's not the whole picture. Robert Crawley is also confounded by the modern world of post-World War I as it upsets the social hierarchy. Meanwhile, despite his indulgence of underbutler Thomas Barrow's shame (it seems Thomas is gay!), Robert isn't always the most tolerant of men.

"I don't want thumbscrews or the rack, but there always seems to be something of Johnny Foreigner about the Catholics," he sniffs to one of his kind during an exchange about religion.

"I don't think I'd have a huge amount in common with Robert if I met him at a dinner party," Bonneville says. "But I like the guy. I like the fact that while he does bluster and he's pompous sometimes, and he makes mistakes, there's a decency and a love for his family underneath it all."

Impeccably clad in a three-piece gray suit and pink tie for this recent interview, the 49-year-old Bonneville, even firmly planted in a 21st-century Manhattan hotel, looks to the manor born. Nonetheless, he brands himself a member of the British middle class ? the son of a surgeon and a nurse who once imagined becoming a lawyer ? and his roles have strayed some distance from the lofty likes of Robert Crawley. For instance, Bonneville has been affable and bumbling in "Notting Hill" and "Mansfield Park," and downright villainous in "The Commander."

And coinciding with his "Downton" duties, he also played the addled Head of Deliverance for the Olympics commission in "Twenty Twelve," a riotous BBC miniseries that spoofed preparations for the London Olympics.

"There are people who think I've been doing nothing for 25 years, and then suddenly I get this role on 'Downton Abbey,'" Bonneville says with a laugh. "But I've had a really lovely time for 25 years! I've played everything from Shakespeare to sitcoms to period dramas to modern serial killers. I consider myself a character actor, and I do love playing different instruments in the orchestra when I get the chance."

Of course, Bonneville realizes that "Downton" is a good bet for the lead citation in his obituary. He has finally acknowledged it: This show is a cultural phenomenon, not just a fleeting fad. And he has many theories why.

First, the savory writing by series creator Julian Fellowes. Besides, the cast is splendid. The production values are luxurious. And the premise remains rich with possibility.

"This is one of the few settings, alongside a hospital and a police station, where you can legitimately find a real cross-section of society under one roof," notes Bonneville. "But underneath it all, this series is about romance rather than sex, it's about tension rather than violence, and it's about family ? both the literal family and the staff as family. It explores the minutiae of those social structures, the nuances of the system as to whether someone's in or out."

Not that he would want to be part of it. He doesn't sentimentalize that long-ago era any more than "Downton" does. And yet ...

"These days," says Bonneville, "we have relationships that are forged, consummated and brought to an end within 24 hours. Back then, the pace of life was slower, and I think we like to breathe out and enjoy that world ? albeit for only an hour or so, on a Sunday night."

Just one more Sunday night, for now.

___

Online:

http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/masterpiece/classic

___

Frazier Moore is a national television columnist for The Associated Press. He can be reached at fmoore(at)ap.org and at http://www.twitter.com/tvfrazier

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/hugh-bonneville-presides-downton-abbey-finale-145404762.html

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Sony Xperia ZL llegar? en abril a 599 euros

Sony Xperia ZL

Hace tiempo que Sony viene anunciando que centrar?n esfuerzos en la gama alta, donde hasta la fecha no ten?an una referencia clara para competir con Samsung y Apple. En este 2013 la apuesta parece fuerte, no en vano, y aunque los flashes se los lleve el Xperia Z, Sony anunci? con ?l un hermano que comparte plataforma, el Xperia ZL, aunque con algunas diferencias entre ambos.

Quiz?s la principal sea que el Xperia ZL pierde la resistencia al agua y los buenos materiales de los que presume el Xperia Z, y aunque est? construido en pl?stico, su tama?o es menor, reduciendo los marcos y mejorando la ergonom?a con la misma diagonal de pantalla.

Adem?s, cuenta con bot?n dedicado para la c?mara y un puerto de infrarrojos, algo que en algunos pa?ses de Asia es imprescindible y que permite manejar aparatos electr?nicos como si de un mando a distancia se tratara.

En un principio se hablaba de que el Sony Xperia ZL no solapar?a al Xperia Z, y que donde se vendiese uno no lo har?a el otro, aunque finalmente parece que esto no ser? tan estricto. Al menos en Alemania, pues sabemos que all? se vender?n ambos, tras anunciarse que el Sony Xperia ZL llegar? al pa?s germano en abril a un precio de 599.99 euros.

No sabemos si los dem?s pa?ses tambi?n lo ver?n llegar, aunque el precio ha sido anunciado por The Phone House, que lo tendr? a la venta en tienda f?sica y online, y cuenta con franquicias repartidas por varios pa?ses europeos.

Estar? disponible, sin embargo, en blanco y negro solamente, nada se sabe de la versi?n roja que se vi? de manera fulgurante y que podr?a ser exclusiva para alguna operadora.

Un movimiento extra?o el de Sony con los Xperia Z y ZL, pues de confirmarse el solape se diluyen las razones de que los terminales estuviesen dise?ados para distintos mercados. As? pues, parece que el fabricante japon?s tuviese sobre la mesa dos dise?os para su buque insignia y no fuese capaz de decantarse por ninguno, lanzando ambos al mercado.

Nosotros aceptamos barco y gustamos de la variedad, as? que si finalmente llega a Espa?a, estaremos encantados de acogerlo.

En Xataka Android | Sony Xperia Z, ya tenemos precio oficial para Espa?a
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Thursday, February 14, 2013

Oil prices edge higher while experts debate demand outlook

Crude prices edged slightly higher again today while industry experts offer differing views on 2013?s oil demand.?

The International Energy Agency has shaved 90,000 barrels a day off its forecasts for this year?s oil demand growth. It now believes that oil demand will grow by 840,000 barrels a day. And it cut its estimate for world demand by 85,000 barrels to 90.7mln barrels a day.?

Elsewhere the US Energy Department has increased its 2013 oil price forecast to $92.82 due to ?increased global demand and lower US production?.?

Yesterday OPEC upgraded its demand forecast for this year. The oil cartel estimates an additional 80,000 barrels of oil will be consumed per day than it previously thought, with the new estimate standing at 840,000 barrels of oil per day.

Having broke through the $119 a barrel mark earlier today Brent Crude futures this afternoon stood at $118.75, up just 7 cents. Meanwhile America?s West Texas Intermediary futures were up 25 cents at $97.75.?

Last night?s American Petroleum Institute revealed a 2.3 mln barrel reduction in crude stockpiles.

Later today, however, the US Department of Energy?s corresponding report is expected to show a 2.2 mln build in crude inventories, though distillate and gasoline inventories are expected to have declined.

Source: http://www.proactiveinvestors.co.uk/companies/news/53658/oil-prices-edge-higher-while-experts-debate-demand-outlook-0000.html

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