Select the directory option from the above "Directory" header!

Menu
Ingram Micro sales slump 12 per cent worldwide in Q1 FY2016

Ingram Micro sales slump 12 per cent worldwide in Q1 FY2016

Distie blames muted IT spending in January and February for decline; APAC result even worse

 Ingram Micro CEO, Alain Monié

Ingram Micro CEO, Alain Monié

Muted spending on PCs, smartphones, serves and storage in January and February 2016 has seen Ingram Micro record a 12 per cent worldwide decrease in sales for Q1 FY2016 compared with the same quarter in 2015.

Asia-Pacific which includes Australia fared even worse with sales down 13.8 per cent from $US2.54 billion in Q1 FY2015 to $US2.19bn for Q1 FY2016.

Global sales came in at $US9.3bn compared with $US10.6bn for Q1 2015.

Ingram Micro CEO, Alain Monié, said, "We saw stabilisation of global IT demand in March, which has continued into April, however, IT spending was muted in the first two months of the year, particularly for high volume categories including PCs, smartphones, servers and storage.

"While we did not capture the full revenue and operating income opportunity available to us in the quarter, our focus on higher value business continues to show results as we delivered a 97 basis point increase in consolidated gross margin, buoyed by strong improvement across all regions.

"We have also increased the pace of some of our strategic investment as we focus on building and enhancing the global capabilities that will support our mid- and longer-term business objectives. We filed our preliminary proxy yesterday afternoon and our transaction to join HNA Group is on track to close in the second half of 2016."

The company noted in its quarterly report that while it sells finished products purchased from many vendors it generated approximately 14 per cent, 11 per cent and 10 per cent of its consolidated net sales for the thirteen weeks ended April 2, 2016 from products purchased from HP Inc. and Hewlett-Packard Enterprise combined, Apple Inc. and Cisco Systems, Inc., respectively. It generated approximately 15 per cent, and 12 per cent of its consolidated net sales for the thirteen weeks ended April 4, 2015 from products purchased from HP Inc. and Hewlett-Packard Enterprise combined, and Apple Inc., respectively.

First Quarter Results of Operations
Ingram reported the translation of foreign currencies versus last year had a negative impact of 3 percentage points on worldwide sales. Approximately $US200 million, or 2 per cent, of the reduction in 2016 first quarter worldwide sales was related to the company negotiating a favourable change in contract terms with some customers in Europe (as highlighted in the last quarter), which led to recognising these sales on a net basis versus a gross basis as the company did in the first quarter of last year.

Additionally, last year's first quarter benefitted from approximately $US100 million, or 1 per cent, in North American mobility distribution business that the company elected to exit this year due to profitability levels that did not meet the company's objectives.

In a statement, Ingram Micro said the remaining sales decline of 6 per cent was primarily related to soft demand for high volume product categories, particularly in consumer markets, which was consistent with the broader overall IT market demand in the quarter. Significantly higher gross margin was the result of a focus on driving a better mix of higher value sales and solid returns on invested capital, as well as recent acquisitions.

Cash flow from operations for the 2016 first quarter significantly improved to $US275 million when compared to approximately $60 million last year. The company said this resulted from strong global execution on the company's working capital improvement program, which helped reduce working capital days at the end of the 2016 first quarter to 23 days, an 8-day improvement year-over-year.

Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP) operating income for the 2016 first quarter was $US38 million and GAAP earnings were $US0.01 cent per diluted share, compared to GAAP operating income of $US98 million and GAAP earnings of $US0.27 per diluted share in the year-earlier period.

Ingram said 2016 first quarter GAAP results were negatively impacted by costs associated with the pending merger with Tianjin Tianhai, as well as higher reorganisation, integration and transition costs and higher amortization expense due to previously acquired customer relationships that were written-off as a result of the integration of certain operations into the company's existing facilities, and recent acquisitions.

2016 first quarter non-GAAP operating income was $US101 million and non-GAAP earnings were $US0.35 per diluted share, compared to non-GAAP operating income of $US125 million and non-GAAP earnings of $US0.43 per diluted share in the 2015 first quarter.

Compared to the same period in 2015, the translation of foreign currencies negatively impacted 2016 first quarter non-GAAP earnings by $US0.03 cents per diluted share. A better mix of high value sales was more than offset by negative leverage related to lower sales in a number of countries, as well as continued strategic investment, particularly in international markets, the company said.


Follow Us

Join the newsletter!

Or

Sign up to gain exclusive access to email subscriptions, event invitations, competitions, giveaways, and much more.

Membership is free, and your security and privacy remain protected. View our privacy policy before signing up.

Error: Please check your email address.

Tags Ingram MicroAlain Monié

Show Comments