UNITED STATES

SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION

WASHINGTON, D.C. 20549

 

FORM 8-K

 

CURRENT REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15 (d)

OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934

 

Date of Report:  June 7, 2006

(Date of earliest event reported)

 

INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS MACHINES CORPORATION

(Exact name of registrant as specified in its charter)

 

New York

 

1-2360

 

13-0871985

(State of Incorporation)

 

(Commission File Number)

 

(IRS employer Identification No.)

 

 

 

 

 

ARMONK, NEW YORK

 

10504

(Address of principal executive offices)

 

(Zip Code)

 

914-499-1900

(Registrant’s telephone number)

 

Check the appropriate box below if the Form 8-K filing is intended to simultaneously satisfy the filing obligation of the registrant under any of the following provisions:

 

o  Written communications pursuant to Rule 425 under the Securities Act (17 CFR 230.425)

 

o  Soliciting material pursuant to Rule 14a-12 under the Exchange Act (17 CFR 240.14a-12)

 

o  Pre-commencement communications pursuant to Rule 14d-2(b) under the Exchange Act (17 CFR 240.14d-2(b))

 

o  Pre-commencement communications pursuant to Rule 13e-4(c) under the Exchange Act (17 CFR 240.13e-4(c))

 

 



 

Item 7.01 (Regulation FD Disclosure)

 

Attachment I contains certain presentation materials for the IBM Global Briefing in India on June 7, 2006.  Attachment II contains supplementary materials about non-GAAP financial measures in the presentation materials.  Attachments I and II are hereby furnished.

 

IBM’s web site (www.ibm.com) contains a significant amount of information about IBM, including financial and other information for investors (www.ibm.com/investor/).  IBM encourages investors to visit its various web sites from time to time, as information is updated and new information is posted.

 

SIGNATURE

 

Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, the registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned, hereunto duly authorized.

 

 

Date: June 7, 2006

 

 

 

By:

/s/   Andrew Bonzani

 

 

 

Andrew Bonzani

 

 

 

Vice President,

 

 

 

Assistant General Counsel &

 

 

 

Assistant Secretary

 

 

2



ATTACHMENT I

 

 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 

 



 

ATTACHMENT II

 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

 



 

Searchable text section of graphics shown above

 



 

ATTACHMENT I

 

IBM Global Briefing

 

 

 

 

 

Bangalore, India

 

[LOGO]

 

 

 

June 6 & 7, 2006

 

 

 

1



 

IBM Global Briefing

[LOGO]

Bangalore, India

 

 

The IBM Model

 

Mark Loughridge

Senior VP and Chief Financial Officer

 

© 2006 IBM Corporation

 

2



 

Certain comments made in the presentation may be characterized as forward looking under the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Those statements involve a number of factors that could cause actual results to differ materially. Additional information concerning these factors is contained in the Company’s filings with the SEC. Copies are available from the SEC, from the IBM web site, or from IBM Investor Relations.

 

In an effort to provide additional and useful information regarding the company’s results as determined by generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP), these and the other materials presented during this event will include certain additional non-GAAP information.

 

The rationale for management’s use of this non-GAAP information, the reconciliation of that information to GAAP, and other related information is included in supplementary materials entitled “Non-GAAP Supplementary Materials” that are posted on the Company’s investor relations web site at http://www.ibm.com/investor/events/global0606/. The Non-GAAP Supplementary Materials are also included as Attachment II to the Company’s Form 8-K dated today.

 

3



 

Agenda

 

Day 1: Tuesday, June 6

 

 

Welcome and Strategic Overview

Sam Palmisano

Global Integration – Challenges & Implications

Panel Discussion

Emerging Markets

Doug Elix

Globally Integrated Capability

Bob Moffat

 

 

Day 2: Wednesday, June 7

 

 

The IBM Model

Mark Loughridge

Services: Global Technology Services

Mike Daniels

Services: Global Business Services

Ginni Rometty

Software

Steve Mills

Hardware

Bill Zeitler

The Financial Model

Mark Loughridge

Group Q&A

 

 

4



 

IBM’s 1990’s Business Mix was Weighted Towards Commoditizing Business Lines with Eroding Profit Margins

 

Business Mix
1996

 

Transaction Mix
1996

 

Financial Trends*

 

 

 

 

 

[CHART]

 

[CHART]

 

[CHART]

 


*                                         Does not include Equity Compensation; 1995-1996 As Reported; 1997-2000 Continuing Operations
**                                  Excludes Special Actions

 

5



 

IBM’s Response:  Divest Low Growth, Low Margin, Commoditizing Product Lines…

 

Major Divestiture / Exit

 

DRAM

 

1999

 

 

 

 

 

Global Network

 

1999

 

 

 

 

 

Flat Panel Displays

 

2001

 

 

 

 

 

HDD

 

2002

 

 

 

 

 

PCs

 

2005

 

 

5-Year Performance Trend Prior to Exit

 

Revenue

 

Declining

Profit Impact

 

Eroding

Cash Flow

 

Significant CapEx
Requirements

 

6



 

and Acquire Value Opportunities to Leverage IBM’s Infrastructure

 

IT Industry Landscape

 

Business Value

 

Infrastructure Value

 

Services

 

Software

 

Hardware

 

Component Value

 

Acquisitions

 

Leadership

 

Capabilities

 

Consolidation
Opportunity

 

New Market
Entry

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

PwCC

 

Corio

 

Maersk IT

 

Daksh

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Rational
Tivoli
Micromuse

 

Logical Networks
KeyMRO
Healthlink
Sector7
Trigo Tech
Cyanea
Alphablox
Venetica
SystemCorp
SRD
Ascential
Gluecode

 

Candle
Schlumberger

 

Lotus
Equitant
Liberty Ins Svcs

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Divestitures / Exits

 

7



 

We Have Shifted Our Business from Commoditizing Business Lines to Higher Value

 

Business Mix 1996

 

Business Mix Today

 

 

 

[CHART]

 

[CHART]

 

8



 

We are Using Cash from Annuity Business to Fund Investments in Higher Value Solutions

 

Transaction Mix 1996

 

Transaction Mix Today

 

 

 

[CHART]

 

[CHART]

 

9



 

This Mix Shift Results in Higher Gross Profit Margins While Increasing Investments Required for Higher Value Solution Selling

 

Financial Trends Late 90s*

 

Financial Trends Today*

 

 

 

[CHART]

 

[CHART]

 


*                                         1995-1996 As Reported; 1997-2004 Continuing Operations; 2001-2005 includes Equity Compensation
**                                  Excludes Special Action

 

10



 

IBM’s Portfolio is Balanced Between Services, Software and Hardware

 

Services 6-8% Revenue Growth

 

Pre-tax

 

Hardware 6-7% Revenue Growth

Grow with or better than Industry

 

Income Mix

 

Gain 1 point systems share

 

 

(2005)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

[CHART]

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Software 6-9% Revenue Growth

 

 

 

 

Grow Strategic SW double digits

 

 

 

Excludes 2Q restructuring charges and PCs Reclassified for 2006 segmentation changes

 

11



 

IBM Global Briefing

 

 

 

 

 

Bangalore, India

 

[LOGO]

 

 

 

June 6 & 7, 2006

 

 

 

12



 

IBM Global Briefing

 

 

 

 

 

Bangalore, India

 

[LOGO]

 

 

 

June 6 & 7, 2006

 

 

 

1



 

IBM Global Briefing

[LOGO]

Bangalore, India

 

 

Global Technology Services

 

Mike Daniels

Senior Vice President

Global Technology Services

IBM Global Services

 

© 2006 IBM Corporation

 

2



 

Certain comments made in the presentation may be characterized as forward looking under the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Those statements involve a number of factors that could cause actual results to differ materially. Additional information concerning these factors is contained in the Company’s filings with the SEC. Copies are available from the SEC, from the IBM web site, or from IBM Investor Relations.

 

In an effort to provide additional and useful information regarding the company’s results as determined by generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP), these and the other materials presented during this event will include certain additional non-GAAP information.

 

The rationale for management’s use of this non-GAAP information, the reconciliation of that information to GAAP, and other related information is included in supplementary materials entitled “Non-GAAP Supplementary Materials” that are posted on the Company’s investor relations web site at http://www.ibm.com/investor/events/global0606/. The Non-GAAP Supplementary Materials are also included as Attachment II to the Company’s Form 8-K dated today.

 

3



 

Our model is to grow Services with or better than the Industry

 

Market Position (YE2005)

 

 

 

Rank

 

Strategic Outsourcing

 

#1

 

HW Maintenance

 

#1

 

ITS

 

#1

 

Consulting

 

#1

(tie)

Application Management

 

#1

 

 

Services Opportunity

2005 – 2009

 

[CHART]

 

Source:  IBM Internal Assessment, based on Global Market View, January 2006, at Constant Currency

 

4



 

Our model is to grow Services with or better than the Industry

 

Longer Term Revenue Growth Model

 

 

 

Strategic Outsourcing

 

4% - 6%

 

 

 

Integrated Tech Services

 

4% - 5%

 

 

 

Maintenance

 

(2) % - 0%

 

 

 

Consulting

 

4% - 5%

 

 

 

Application Management

 

8% - 10%

 

 

 

BTO

 

20% - 25%

 

 

 

Acquisitions

 

2%

 

 

 

Total Services

 

6% - 8%

 

 

 

Profit Leverage

 

8% - 10%

 

 

 

IBM Pre-tax Income Mix

(2005)

 

 

 

[CHART]

 

Excludes 2Q restructuring charges and PCs Reclassified for 2006 segmentation changes

 

5



 

IBM Global Services is comprised of two parts:

 

IBM Pre-Tax Income Mix

(2005)

 

[CHART]

 

Global Business Services (GBS) Professional Services

 

        Consulting

 

        Application Management

 

        Federal

 

Global Technology Services (GTS) Infrastructure Services

 

        Strategic Outsourcing

 

        Business Transformation Outsourcing

 

        Integrated Technology Services

 

        Maintenance

 

Excludes 2Q restructuring charges and PCs Reclassified for 2006 segmentation changes

 

6



 

Strategic Outsourcing

 

Driving Growth

 

                  Strengthen our market leadership position

 

                  Expand our sales and delivery capabilities

 

                  Win in marketplace against old & new competitors

 

                  Lead in new markets

 

                  Grow relationships with current portfolio of clients – sell increased IBM value into the base.

 

                  Drive standardization and offering development for the SMB marketplace

 

                  Invest in automation to gain efficiency

 

                  IBM Research and product brand support / innovation

 

[CHART]

 

[LOGO]

 

7



 

Integrated Technology Services realignment to Service Product Lines

 

2006 IT Infrastructure Market

(excludes BTO and Application Management)

 

 

 

2006

 

 

 

 

 

Oppt.

 

‘05-’07

 

Service Product Lines

 

($B)

 

CAGRs

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

IT Strategy and Architecture

 

$

8

 

7

%

 

 

 

 

 

 

Application Infrastructure Services

 

$

49

 

8

%

 

 

 

 

 

 

End-User Services

 

$

28

 

3

%

 

 

 

 

 

 

Networking Services

 

$

46

 

6

%

 

 

 

 

 

 

Business Continuity and Resiliency

 

$

2

 

7

%

 

 

 

 

 

 

Security and Privacy Services

 

$

18

 

15

%

 

 

 

 

 

 

Site and Facilities Services

 

$

22

 

3

%

 

 

 

 

 

 

Server Services

 

$

32

 

5

%

 

 

 

 

 

 

Storage and Data Services

 

$

28

 

4

%

 

 

 

 

 

 

Maint. and Technical Support Services

 

$

90

 

2

%

 

Transformation Initiatives

 

                  Simplify the offerings portfolio

 

                  Leverage IBM product sales – attach more IT Services

 

                  Partner with Systems & Technology and Software to offer IBM infrastructure solutions to clients

 

                  Implement a globally consistent delivery model to drive efficiencies

 

                  Focus on high growth/core competency market segments

 

8



Slide1

Business Continuity & Resiliency Services

 

                  Market opportunity

 

                  BCRS market is growing at 7%, while IBM grew BCRS 14% in 2005

 

                  BCRS is a $2B opportunity in 2006

 

                  Top of mind with clients across most countries

 

                  IBM Strength

 

                  IBM had 24% market share in 2005 and has vast experience in this market

 

                  IBM is transitioning from being a multi-country provider to being a global provider

 

                  We have a comprehensive portfolio – event-driven (e.g. floods), data-driven (e.g. risk management) and business-driven (e.g. compliance)

 

                  New service products include Contingency Planning Assessment Services

 

9



 

Security & Privacy Services:
Managed Security Services

 

                  Market opportunity

 

                  IT Security is $18B opportunity in 2006, growing at 15% CAGR

 

                  Companies are spending on security (anywhere from 3-8% of their IT budget) without industry expertise or knowledge

 

                  Risk is great – one security incident costs a company about $14M, liability for phishing data could be in billions of dollars

 

                  Managed Security Services (outsourcing) is about 10% of IT security market, with 95-98% retention rate

 

                  IBM Strength

 

                  IBM can leverage our scale from our global security operations centers, while lowering our clients’ security risk

 

                  Experience from our SO base (manage security for 2/3 of our accounts)

 

                  With IBM Research created analytical tools and models to evaluate behaviors and trends

 

                  We scale to deliver security services cost effectively while lowering security risk to our clients

 

                  3,500 security consultants around the world

 

10



 

Storage & Data Services:
Including Information Lifecycle Management

 

                  Market opportunity

 

                  Storage & Data Services (managing client’s information & storage environments) is an $28B opportunity, growing over 4% annually

 

                  Information Lifecycle Management (one of our solutions in this area) is growing at 14% CAGR and is a $6B opportunity – growing twice the rate of storage services in general

 

                  IBM Strength

 

                  IBM’s solutions include Information Lifecycle Management capabilities, data management & storage infrastructure

 

                  Gartner & Giga say IBM is a leader & the strongest infrastructure player in Enterprise Content Management

 

                  IBM award-winning technical platform

 

                  Complete IBM solution

 

11



 

Networking Services:  IP Convergence

 

                  Market opportunity

 

                  Networking Services is a $46B opportunity in 2006. Part of this opportunity is IP Convergence

 

                  Enterprises recognize the value of moving all of their voice and data networks onto a single network

 

                  40% of companies will have completed convergence by 2010

 

                  95% of large & midsize companies will have started convergence by 2010

 

                  As telephony becomes an application, enterprises must construct a plan to assess and then integrate communications and business applications to accelerate their business processes (Gartner)

 

                  IBM Strength

 

                  IBM’s leadership in solutions & services (including SO), exceptional global reach for services delivery, and deep industry knowledge position us to succeed in this market

 

                  IBM has partnerships with industry leaders like Cisco, Avaya, Nortel, 3Com, Siemens, national & international telecom carriers

 

                  Recognized a leader by IDC in Network Consulting and Integration Services

 

12



 

Business Transformation Outsourcing

 

Key Long Term Strategies

 

                  Invest to grow our capabilities in F&A, HR, CRM, Procurement, and Supply Chain Management

 

                  Leverage BPO capability to deliver efficient, high-quality front and back office process operation

 

                  Exploit global delivery and process capabilities

 

                  Expand asset base to deliver SOA-enabled functionality in support of our services products

 

[CHART]

 

[LOGO]

 

13



 

[GRAPHIC]

 

Panel:
Promising
New Growth Opportunities

 

14



 

[GRAPHIC]

Erich Clementi

General Manager

BTO and BPTS, IBM

 

 

[GRAPHIC]

Ponani Gopalakrishnan (Gopal)

Director

India Research Lab, IBM

 

 

[GRAPHIC]

Pavan Vaish

Chief Operating Officer

IBM Daksh

 

15



 

Summary

 

                  IBM Global Services will grow with or better than the industry over the long-term.

 

                  Our Strategic Outsourcing business has steady growth. We’ll continue to leverage our strong customer base.

 

                  ITS is well-positioned in our transformation.

 

                  We are aggressively targeting growth markets such as Business Continuity & Resiliency Services and Information Lifecycle Management.

 

                  BTO is an excellent growth opportunity and we expect to outgrow the market.

 

                  Our global capabilities will be the underpinnings of our success.

 

16



 

IBM Global Briefing

 

 

 

 

 

Bangalore, India

 

[LOGO]

 

 

 

June 6 & 7, 2006

 

 

 

17



 

IBM Global Briefing

 

 

 

 

 

Bangalore, India

 

[LOGO]

 

 

 

June 6 & 7, 2006

 

 

 

1



 

IBM Global Briefing

[LOGO]

Bangalore, India

 

 

Global Business Services

 

Ginni Rometty

Senior Vice President

Global Business Services

IBM Global Services

 

© 2006 IBM Corporation

 

2



 

Certain comments made in the presentation may be characterized as forward looking under the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Those statements involve a number of factors that could cause actual results to differ materially. Additional information concerning these factors is contained in the Company’s filings with the SEC. Copies are available from the SEC, from the IBM web site, or from IBM Investor Relations.

 

In an effort to provide additional and useful information regarding the company’s results as determined by generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP), these and the other materials presented during this event will include certain additional non-GAAP information.

 

The rationale for management’s use of this non-GAAP information, the reconciliation of that information to GAAP, and other related information is included in supplementary materials entitled “Non-GAAP Supplementary Materials” that are posted on the Company’s investor relations web site at http://www.ibm.com/investor/events/global0606/. The Non-GAAP Supplementary Materials are also included as Attachment II to the Company’s Form 8-K dated today.

 

3



 

Our model is to grow with or better than the industry

 

IBM Pre-tax Income Mix

(2005)

 

[CHART]

 

Market Position (YE2005)

 

 

 

Rank

 

Consulting

 

#1

(tie)

Application Management Services

 

#1

 

 

Services Opportunity 2005 – 2009

 

[CHART]

 

Source: IBM Internal Assessment, based on Global Market View,  January 2006, at Constant Currency

 

Global Business Services

Longer-Term Revenue Growth Model

 

Consulting

 

4% -  5%

Application Management Services

 

8% -10%

Total Services

 

6% - 8%

 

Excludes 2Q restructuring charges and PCs Reclassified for 2006 segmentation changes

 

4



 

Global Business Services Growth Strategy

 

Client

Relationship

 

Business

Innovation

Solutions

Capabilities

 

Differentiated Global Delivery

 

Path to Profitable Revenue Growth

 

                  Client Relationships

 

                  Intensifying relationship depth with top clients

 

                  Business Solutions

 

                  Addressing defined “pain points”; reusable SOA components; measurable client outcomes.

 

                  Innovation/New Capabilities

 

                  Integrating IBM to create new client value

 

5



 

Client Relationship:  Growth Strategy

 

GBS Resource Capability by Sector

 

[CHART]

 

Opportunity

 

                  Expand the number of key clients

 

                  Drive non-linear growth with additional service line penetration

 

                  Drive client preference, reduces cost of sales with industry depth

 

6



 

Client Relationship: Expanding AMS with multiple sales channels

 

Global
Delivery
Direct

System
Integration

Outsourcing

 

 

 

 

Full

Outsourcing

 

 

 

Assisted

Transformational

 

 

 

Co-Sourcing

 

 

 

Portfolio

Outtasking

 

 

 

Application

Outtasking

 

 

 

Special

Team Model

 

 

 

Staff

Augmentation

 

IBM Strengths

 

                  Market share leader

 

                  CMM / CMMI Level 5

 

                  >15 yrs; 340K engagements

 

                  Design, build, manage

 

                  Deep industry skills

 

                  Leverages Software, R&D

 

7



 

Business Solutions: Leverage Research, hardware, and software

 

GBS Business Solution

Revenue Shift

 

[CHART]

 

IBM Strengths

 

                  45 Selected Business Solutions

 

                  450 Sales Specialists

 

                  ISV Relationships #1 worldwide

 

                  Global Business Solutions Center

 

                  Higher profit margins

 

Every $1 of solution opportunity yields another $.60 -.80 in hardware, software, or other services opportunity

 

8



 

Business Solutions: Decrease client time to value and risk

 

Distribution Sector

 

Communications Leader

 

Financial Services Sector

 

Banking

 

                  Back Office Operations

                  Front Office Optimization

                  Risk and Compliance

 

Financial Markets

 

                  FM Data Management

                  Risk and Compliance

                  Trade Process Transformation

 

Insurance

 

                  Core Insurance

                  Insurance Business Process Transformation

                  Insurance Front Office

                  Risk and Compliance

 

9



 

Business Solutions:  Example

 

IBM Banking Risk
& Compliance Solution

 

Solution
Components

 

Basel II:

AML Solution Results

 

Credit Risk

 

 

 

 

Deployed at 13 of the Top 20 US Banks and globally

 

Basel II:

 

 

 

Operational Risk

Drove above average services gross profit margin

 

 

 

 

 

Anti- Money

Leveraged AML engagements to drive additional Risk &

 

Laundering (AML)

 

Compliance work

 

 

 

 

 

Fraud Detection & Prevention

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Information Risk Management

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Operational Resilience

 

 

 

Engagements drove 2X hardware and software sales

 

10



 

Innovation / New Capabilities:  Making Markets

 

Integrate the Breadth of IBM Capabilities

 

Service Oriented
Architecture

 

Center for Business
Optimization

 

Information
on Demand

 

 

 

 

 

        Software & Research Collaboration

 

        15K SOA architects

 

        $143B oppty 2008

 

        Joint GBS/Research/ Software capability

        New launches:

         Inventory Optimization

         Fraud Detection

         Tax Optimization

 

        Leverages IBM data warehousing, analytics

        $114B oppty 2008

 

 

 

 

 

[LOGO]

 

[LOGO]

 

[LOGO]

 

11



 

Summary
GBS Global Capability: > 100,000 professionals* deployed WW

 

[GRAPHIC]

 

End to End resource optimization through Professional Marketplace

 

IBM Strengths

 

                  Expertise

 

                  Insight from 340K engagements; > 15 years

 

                  Advantaged by decades of R&D investment

 

                  End-to-end, “mirror image” local/global skills

 

                  Depth of industry skills

 

                  60% flexible resources

 

                  In excess of 20,000 strategic Global Delivery resources

 

                  Infrastructure

 

                  Global Business Solutions Center: foundry for SOA component development

 

                  16 Strategic Delivery Centers

 

12



 

IBM Global Briefing

 

 

 

 

 

Bangalore, India

 

[LOGO]

 

 

 

June 6 & 7, 2006

 

 

 

13



 

[GRAPHIC]

 

Panel: 
Differentiated
Global Delivery

 

14



 

[GRAPHIC]

Amitabh Ray

 

Global Delivery Consulting & Application Services Leader

 

 

[GRAPHIC]

Dave Seybold

 

Global Delivery Consulting Services Leader

 

 

[GRAPHIC]

Jeby Cherian

 

Global Business Solutions Center Leader

 

 

[GRAPHIC]

Partha Chakraborty

 

Global Client Engagement Leader

 

15



 

IBM Global Briefing

 

 

 

 

 

Bangalore, India

 

[LOGO]

 

 

 

June 6 & 7, 2006

 

 

 

16



 

IBM Global Briefing

 

 

 

 

 

Bangalore, India

 

[LOGO]

 

 

 

June 6 & 7, 2006

 

 

 

1



 

[LOGO]

 

IBM Global Briefing

 

 

Bangalore, India

 

 

 

IBM Software
2006 Update

 

 

Steve Mills

Senior Vice President and Group Executive

IBM Software

 

© 2006 IBM Corporation

 

2



 

Certain comments made in the presentation may be characterized as forward looking under the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Those statements involve a number of factors that could cause actual results to differ materially. Additional information concerning these factors is contained in the Company’s filings with the SEC. Copies are available from the SEC, from the IBM web site, or from IBM Investor Relations.

 

In an effort to provide additional and useful information regarding the company’s results as determined by generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP), these and the other materials presented during this event will include certain additional non-GAAP information.

 

The rationale for management’s use of this non-GAAP information, the reconciliation of that information to GAAP, and other related information is included in supplementary materials entitled “Non-GAAP Supplementary Materials” that are posted on the Company’s investor relations web site at http://www.ibm.com/investor/events/global0606/. The Non-GAAP Supplementary Materials are also included as Attachment II to the Company’s Form 8-K dated today.

 

3



 

Industry Dynamics
2005 Software Revenue

 

[CHART]

 

[CHART]

 

[CHART]

 

 

 

 

 

Operating Systems

 

Middleware

 

Enterprise Applications

$33B

 

$80B

 

$92B

4% CGR

 

5% CGR

 

5% CGR

 


Notes:             (1) Only top market share leaders listed
(2) IBM share includes software revenue from IGS transactions;  CGR for 2005 - 2009

 

4



 

IBM Software Revenue Growth Model

 

Revenue Growth Model

 

Branded Middleware

 

9

%

-

11%

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Other Middleware

 

(2

)%

-

0%

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Operating Systems

 

(2

)%

-

0%

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Acquisitions

 

2

%

-

3%

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Total Software

 

6

%

-

9%

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Profit Growth

 

10

%

-

12%

 

 

IBM Pre-tax Income Mix

(2005)

 

[CHART]

 

Excludes 2Q restructuring charges and PCs

Reclassified for 2006 segmentation changes

 

5



 

Software Revenue Growth

 

                  Invest in high growth market segments

 

                  Leverage IBM’s global reach

 

                  Geographic presence

 

                  Deep technical skills

 

                  Extensive client relationships

 

                  Capitalize on IBM’s unique ability to deliver SOA

 

                  Make prudent investments in legacy/operating systems software

 

                  Enhance the integration of our end-to-end portfolio

 

                  Leverage z9 and other hardware sales to drive O/S revenue

 

                  Selectively acquire software companies to extend the product portfolio

 

6



 

IBM Software
2005 Revenue = $16.8 Billion

 

Branded Middleware

Software Services/Other

 

$8.0B +9%, +9% YTY @ CC

$0.8B  +19%, +18% YTY @ CC

                  WebSphere

                  Information Mgmt.

                  Lotus / WPLC

                  Tivoli

                  Rational

                  Lab Software Services

 

 

[CHART]

 

Operating Systems

Other Middleware

$2.4B -2%, -3% YTY @ CC

$4.6B -1%, -2% YTY @ CC

                  System Software

                  Host Tools & Compilers

                  Comm. Servers

                  Printer / Storage

PLM

$1.1B  +3%, +3% YTY @ CC

                  Computer-aided design and manufacturing software

 


Note:                                (1) Revenue $ as reported, YTY% @ CC
(2) Reclassified for 2006 segment changes

 

7



 

IBM Software Revenue

 

1996

 

2000

 

2005

 

Revenue = $11.9B

 

Revenue = $13.3B

 

Revenue = $16.8B

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

[CHART]

 

[CHART]

 

[CHART]

 

 


Note:                                (1) Reclassified for 2006 segment changes

 

8



 

Investing in High Growth Product Segments

 

2005 Middleware

Opportunity = $ 80 B

2005 – 2009 CGR = 5%

 

[CHART]

 

2009 Market Mix

 

High Growth Product Segments

 

‘05 – ’09
CGR

 

IBM
Share
Position

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Information Integration

 

11

%

# 1

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Content Management

 

10

%

# 1

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Portals and Personalization

 

10

%

# 1

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Mobile Middleware

 

9

%

# 1

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Storage Management

 

8

%

# 3

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Integration Server

 

7

%

# 1

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Advanced Collaboration

 

6

%

# 1

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Security Management

 

5

%

# 2

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Relational DB Engines & Tools

 

5

%

# 2

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

AD Lifecycle Management Tools

 

5

%

# 1

 

 

Source:  IBM opportunity analysis based on Industry Reports / Market Research, May 2006

 

9



 

Acquisitions Complement Our Organic Growth Strategy

 

 

                  Aptrix

                  Trilog

                  PureEdge

                  Bowstreet

 

 

 

                  Rational

                  Information Labs

                  SystemCorp

                  BuildForge

 

 

 


[CHART]

 

 

 

                  Informix

                  Tarian

                  CrossAccess

                  Green Pasture

                  Trigo

                  Alphablox

                  Venetica

                  SRD

                  Ascential

                  DWL

                  iPhrase

                  LAS

                  Unicorn Software

 

 

                  CrossWorlds

                  Holosofx

                  Gluecode

                  DataPower

 

 

 

                  Metamerge

                  TrelliSoft

                  Access360

                  Think Dynamics

                  Candle

                  Cyanea

                  Isogon

                  Collation

                  CIMS Labs

                  Micromuse

                  Rembo

 

 

10



 

Service Oriented Architecture (SOA)

 

... a service

 

… service oriented architecture (SOA)

 

 

 

A repeatable business
task
– e.g., check
customer credit;
open new account

[GRAPHIC]

An IT architectural style
that supports
integrating a business as
linked services

 

 

 

“SOA is the heart of the next
wave of innovation.
The
leaders that do this well are
able to rapidly change …”

“SOA is critical for … executing the
on-demand vision and in preparing
… for the incremental changes
 … over time. Companies …
make better decisions.”

 

 

[LOGO]

[LOGO]

 

11



 

Significant Opportunity for IBM

 

Worldwide SOA Engine and
Component Market Forecast

($ Millions)

 

[CHART]

 

2004 SOA Market Share

 

[CHART]

 

Source:  WinterGreen Research, 2005

 

80% of customers will be using SOA for new
product development by 2008

 

- Gartner Group

 

12



 

IBM SOA Leadership
Complete Capability

 

IBM’s SOA Reference Architecture

 

 

Business Innovation & Optimization Services

 

 

 

 

 

 

Interaction
Services

Process
Services

Information
Services

 

 

 

 

 

Development Services

ESB

IT Service Management

 

 

 

 

 

Partner
Services

Business App
Services

Access
Services

 

 

 

 

 

 

Infrastructure Services

 

 

Full Integration Architecture Available Today!

 

                  $1+ Billion / year invested in SOA

 

                  15,000 SOA Consultants, Architects and IT Specialists

 

                  Over 300 SOA related patents; 500+ pre-built industry specific data and process models; over 3,000 SOA assets for business process management

 

                  2,500+ Business Partners

 

                  1,900+ Customer Engagements

 

[LOGO]

20% Increase in productivity for procurement staff – payback within 1 year

[LOGO]

Saved £4 M in development costs due to reuse of services

[LOGO]

25% decrease in maintaining & enhancing    e-government portal

 

13



 

IBM Software
% Revenue by Geography

 

North America

[CHART]

Latin America

(6,600 Sales/Tech Support)

(600 Sales/Tech Support)

 

 

 

 

 

 

Europe

Asia Pacific

(5,900 Sales/Tech Support)

(3,200 Sales/Tech Support)

 

Note: May not add due to rounding

 

14



 

IBM Software

 

                                          26,000 Developers

 

Major R&D Locations

 

                                          16,000 Developers

                                          4,000 Developers

 

 

 

 

 

 

                                          6,000 Developers

 

 

 

 

[GRAPHIC]

 

 

Note: Middleware and Operating Systems Software Development Resources

 

15



 

Summary

 

                  Software Business Model delivers market share growth

 

                  Strong profit / cash contribution

 

                  Mix shifts improve leverage on growth rate

 

                  Focus on higher growth segments

 

                  IBM is uniquely positioned to capitalize on customer shift to Service Oriented Architecture (SOA)

 

                  Resources are positioned to take advantage of global market shifts

 

16



 

IBM Global Briefing

 

 

 

Bangalore, India

[LOGO]

 

 

June 6 & 7, 2006

 

 

17



 

[GRAPHIC]

Harish Grama

 

Vice President, IBM India Software Laboratory

 

IBM Software Group

 

 

[GRAPHIC]

Willy Chiu

 

Vice President, High Performance On Demand Solutions

 

IBM Software Group

 

18



 

IBM Global Briefing

 

 

 

Bangalore, India

[LOGO]

 

 

June 6 & 7, 2006

 

 

19



 

IBM Global Briefing

 

 

 

 

 

Bangalore, India

 

[LOGO]

 

 

 

June 6 & 7, 2006

 

 

 

1



 

[LOGO]

 

IBM Global Briefing

 

Bangalore, India

 

 

IBM Systems and Technology

 

Bill Zeitler

Senior Vice President and Group Executive

IBM Systems and Technology Group

 

© 2006 IBM Corporation

 

2



 

Certain comments made in the presentation may be characterized as forward looking under the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Those statements involve a number of factors that could cause actual results to differ materially. Additional information concerning these factors is contained in the Company’s filings with the SEC. Copies are available from the SEC, from the IBM web site, or from IBM Investor Relations.

 

In an effort to provide additional and useful information regarding the company’s results as determined by generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP), these and the other materials presented during this event will include certain additional non-GAAP information.

 

The rationale for management’s use of this non-GAAP information, the reconciliation of that information to GAAP, and other related information is included in supplementary materials entitled “Non-GAAP Supplementary Materials” that are posted on the Company’s investor relations web site at http://www.ibm.com/investor/events/global0606/. The Non-GAAP Supplementary Materials are also included as Attachment II to the Company’s Form 8-K dated today.

 

3



 

Our model is to gain 1 point of systems share per year and grow Systems & Technology revenue 6% per year

 

Systems & Technology opportunity

2005 – 2009

 

[CHART]

 

Source: IBM Internal Assessment, based on Global Market View, 1/06, at Constant Currency, IDC & Gartner

 

4



 

Systems & Technology revenue growth model

 

Revenue growth model

 

 

Mainframe

1 – 3

%

 

Servers

5– 8

%

 

Storage

7 – 10

%

 

Technology Collaboration Solutions

10 – 12

%

 

 

    Engineering Services

 

 

 

 

    Microelectronics

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Acquisitions

0 – 1

pts

 

 

 

 

 

Total Revenue

6 – 7

%

 

 

 

 

 

Profit

7 – 8

%

 

IBM pre-tax income mix

(2005)

 

[CHART]

 

Excludes 2Q restructuring charges and PCs Reclassified for 2006 segmentation changes

 

5



 

Five-year server share change

 

[CHART]

 

Source: IDC Server Tracker (2000-2005), four quarter rolling average

 

6



 

Five-year server share change

 

[CHART]

 

#1 Overall servers

 

#1 High end *

 

#1 Unix

 

#1 Blades

 


Source: IDC Server Tracker (2000-2005), four quarter rolling average; *$250K+ servers

 

7



 

Five-year external disk storage systems share change

 

[CHART]

 


* Market share change for HP and Compaq combined; Source: WW Disk Storage Systems Forecast and Analysis, 2003-07, IDC #30247, 10/03 (2000-01 market shares), IDC’s WW Quarterly Disk Storage Systems Tracker, 6/06 (2002-05 market shares)

 

8



 

2005 disk plus branded tape storage revenue share

 

[CHART]

 

Source: IDC #201494 WW Combined Disk & Tape Storage 4Q05 Market Share Update, 5/06

 

9



 

Execution: System z

 

                  Extend leadership by driving traditional and new workload growth

 

                  Launched z9 Business Class mainframe

 

$250K+ server revenue share +

 

[CHART]

 

Installed capacity ++

 

[CHART]

 


+Source: IDC Quarterly Server Tracker, 5/06, rolling four quarter average    ++IBM internal data

 

10



 

Execution: System z

 

                  60% of worldwide revenue driven by new workloads, such as Linux, Java and enterprise applications

 

[CHART]

 

Source: IBM internal data; as of 5/06; Java Engines = System z Application Assist Processors;
Linux Engines = Integrated Facility for Linux; DB2 Engines =  z9 Integrated Information Processor

 

11



 

Execution: POWER5+

 

[GRAPHIC]

 

                  Over 70 #1 POWER5 and POWER5+ benchmarks

 

                  Complete the transition to POWER5+

 

16-way system

 

[CHART]

 

64-way system

 

[CHART]

 

Source: Benchmark results current as of 5/30/06, TPC-C results: http://www.tpc.org; Over 70 #1 benchmarks refers to all POWER5 and POWER5+ http://www.ibm.com/systems/p/benchmarks/

IBM TPC-C result of 1,025,169 tpmC at $4.42/tpmC on a 16-core (8 chips, 32 threads) 2.2 GHz IBM System p5-570 (available 05/31/06)  vs. HP TPC-C result of 332,265 tpmC at $4.48/tpmC on a 16-core (16 chips, 16 threads) 1.6 GHz HP Integrity rx8620 (available 07/15/05). IBM TPC-C result of 3,210,540 tpmC at $5.07/tpmC on a 64-core (32 chips, 128 threads) 1.9 GHz IBM p5-595 (available 09/30/04)  vs. HP TPC-C result of 1,231,433 tpmC at $4.82/tpmC on a 64-core (64 chips, 64 threads) 1.6 GHz HP Integrity Superdome (available 05/05/06).

 

12



 

Execution: Deep computing

 

[GRAPHIC]

 

                  20+% revenue growth in market, 2004 and 2005 +

 

                  $14B revenue opportunity in market by end of decade +

 

Supercomputer revenue forecast +

 

[CHART]

 

Supercomputer performance ++

 

[CHART]

 


+ Source: IDC Technical Server QView reports 2000-2005, IDC Technical Computing System Forecast, 3/06, future forecasts

++ www.top500.org

 

13



 

Infrastructure: Simplification
Virtualization

 

                  Mainframe inspired

 

                  Over 30,000 mainframe and POWER-based servers running virtualization

 

                  A leader in x86 virtualization

 

                  2,000+ storage virtualization clients

 

14



 

                  Mainframe inspired

 

                  Over 30,000 mainframe and POWER-based servers running virtualization

 

                  A leader in x86 virtualization

 

                  2,000+ storage virtualization clients

 

[GRAPHIC]

 

[LOGO]

 

15



 

Infrastructure: Integration
BladeCenter

 

[GRAPHIC]

 

                  #1 in revenue and volume, 11 successive quarters

 

                  Intel collaboration

 

Blade server revenue forecast +

 

[CHART]

 

BladeCenter revenue ramp ++

 

[CHART]

 


+ Source: IDC Server Forecast, 3/06
++ IDC Quarterly Server Tracker, 5/06; #1 in revenue/volume 11 successive quarters refers to Q303 thru Q106

 

16



 

Infrastructure: Collaboration

 

[LOGO]

 

[LOGO]

 

[LOGO]

 

 

 

 

 

[GRAPHIC]

 

[GRAPHIC]

 

[GRAPHIC]

 

17



 

Technology: Collaboration

 

We help clients transform the way they innovate, develop and deliver products using IBM’s expertise and intellectual property

 

                  R&D services

 

                  Leadership semiconductor design

 

                  Scalable IP – Power Architecture, BladeCenter, ASICs

 

[GRAPHIC]

 

18



 

[LOGO]

 

R&D transformation

 

[GRAPHIC]

 

19



 

[LOGO]

 

[LOGO]

 

 

 

 

 

R&D transformation

 

Integrated processor

 

 

 

 

 

[GRAPHIC]

 

[GRAPHIC]

 

 

20



 

[LOGO]

 

[LOGO]

 

[LOGO]

 

 

 

 

 

R&D transformation

 

Integrated processor

 

Information-based medicine

 

 

 

 

 

[GRAPHIC]

 

[GRAPHIC]

 

[GRAPHIC]

 

21



 

IBM Global Briefing

 

 

 

Bangalore, India

[LOGO]

 

 

June 6 & 7, 2006

 

 

22



 

Technology: Collaboration

 

[LOGO]

 

23



 

Technology: Alliances

 

[LOGO]

 

[GRAPHIC]

 

24



 

New growth opportunities

 

Infrastructure

 

Technology collaboration

 

 

 

[CHART]

Technology
IP
OEM
Expertise

[CHART]

 

Source: IBM internal assessment, based on Global Market View, 1/06, at constant currency; Note: Not to scale; SW includes embedded SW and Factory SW

 

25



 

Summary

 

                  Extend server lead

 

                  Lead in storage

 

                  Exploit infrastructure solutions opportunity

 

                  Expand technology collaboration opportunity

 

26



 

Panel discussion

 

                  Collaboration and global integration

 

[GRAPHIC]

 

Rod Adkins

 

Vice President Development

 

Systems & Technology Group, IBM

 

 

 

[GRAPHIC]

 

Adalio Sanchez

 

General Manager

 

Technology Collaboration Solutions, IBM

 

 

 

[GRAPHIC]

 

Reena Malangone

 

Director, India Systems & Technology Lab

 

Systems & Technology Group, IBM

 

27



 

IBM Global Briefing

 

 

 

Bangalore, India

[LOGO]

 

 

June 6 & 7, 2006

 

 

28



 

 

IBM Global Briefing

 

 

 

 

 

Bangalore, India

 

[LOGO]

 

 

 

June 6 & 7, 2006

 

 

 

1



 

IBM Global Briefing

 

 

Bangalore, India

 

[LOGO]

 

Financial Model

 

 

Mark Loughridge

Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

 

© 2006 IBM Corporation

 

2



 

Certain comments made in the presentation may be characterized as forward looking under the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995.  Those statements involve a number of factors that could cause actual results to differ materially.  Additional information concerning these factors is contained in the Company’s filings with the SEC.  Copies are available from the SEC, from the IBM web site, or from IBM Investor Relations.

 

In an effort to provide additional and useful information regarding the company’s results as determined by generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP), these and the other materials presented during this event will include certain additional non-GAAP information.

 

The rationale for management’s use of this non-GAAP information, the reconciliation of that information to GAAP, and other related information is included in supplementary materials entitled “Non-GAAP Supplementary Materials” that are posted on the Company’s investor relations web site at http://www.ibm.com/investor/events/global0606/.   The Non-GAAP Supplementary Materials are also included as Attachment II to the Company’s Form 8-K dated today.

 

3



 

Strength of the Portfolio

 

4



 

2005 Segment Revenue and Pre-Tax Profit

 

Revenue Mix

 

Pre-tax Income Mix

 

 

 

[CHART]

 

[CHART]

 

Balanced portfolio of Hardware, Software and Services

 

Excludes 2Q restructuring charges and PCs

Reclassified for 2006 segmentation changes

 

5



 

Our Model is to Grow Services with or Better than Industry

 

Pre-tax Income Mix
(2005)

 

[CHART]

 

Services 6-8% Revenue Growth

 

                  Aligned around infrastructure and professional services

 

                  Deliver unique solution offerings leveraging the full breadth of IBM

 

                  Capture the high-growth Business Transformation market

 

                  Scale high volume services through SMB

 

                  Leverage global presence and delivery capability

 

Excludes 2Q restructuring charges and PCs

Reclassified for 2006 segmentation changes

 

6



 

Our Model is to Grow Strategic Middleware Double-digits

 

Pre-tax Income Mix
(2005)

 

[CHART]

 

Software 6-9% Revenue Growth

 

                  Improving mix towards high growth software

 

                  Lead the market in Service-Oriented Architecture (SOA)

 

                  Capitalize on “Information on Demand”

 

                  Extend Software Management capabilities / solutions

 

Excludes 2Q restructuring charges and PCs

Reclassified for 2006 segmentation changes

 

7



 

Our Model is to Gain Systems Share

 

Pre-tax Income Mix
(2005)

 

[CHART]

 

Hardware 6-7% Revenue Growth

 

                  Server market share has grown 9.5 points since 2000 (Source: IDC)

 

                  Leveraging assets to drive Technology Collaboration Solutions

 

                  Exploit infrastructure solutions

 

                  Capture strategic value through virtualization across all platforms

 

Excludes 2Q restructuring charges and PCs

Reclassified for 2006 segmentation changes

 

8



 

IBM’s Portfolio is Balanced between Services, Software and Hardware

 

Pre-tax Income Mix
(2005)

 

[CHART]

 

IBM .....

 

                  transformed itself by divesting commodity businesses and investing in higher value solutions

 

                  has a strategically balanced portfolio of hardware, software, and services

 

                  integrates to create unique value for clients

 

                  delivers strong earnings growth and cash generation

 

Excludes 2Q restructuring charges and PCs

Reclassified for 2006 segmentation changes

 

9



 

[LOGO]

 

Financial Model

 

10



 

IBM Investment Cycle

 

[CHART]

 

11



 

Our Long-term Business Objectives

 

                  Drive revenue growth through new markets, new offerings and new products both developed and acquired

 

                  Focus on productivity to improve margin

 

                  Deploy cash to fund growth and provide shareholder returns via dividends / buybacks

 

Deliver 10-12% Earnings per Share Growth
over the Long-term

 

12



 

We Have Achieved Strong Double-digit Earnings Per Share Growth Over the Past Two Years

 

[CHART]

 


* Excludes Special Actions

 

13



 

IBM Has Maintained Consistently High Cash Flow

 

[CHART]

 


*                 Management View of Cash = Net cash from operating activities (continuing operations) excluding global financing receivables and net capital expenditures

 

**          1999 not restated for stock-based compensation

 

14



 

IBM Has Maintained Consistently High Cash Flow
....Even During Difficult Business Cycles

 

[CHART]

 


*                 Management View of Cash = Net cash from operating activities (continuing operations) excluding global financing receivables and net capital expenditures

 

**          1999 not restated for stock-based compensation

 

Source IT Industry:  IBM Internal Assessment, based on Global Market View

 

15



 

IBM’s Strong Cash Generation Supports our Dividend Strategy and...

 

IBM Dividend Per Share

 

[CHART]

 

16



 

...Share Repurchase Reduces Shares Outstanding and Contributes to EPS Growth

 

IBM Share Repurchase History

 

[CHART]

 

17



 

Leveraging Our Global Infrastructure

 

                  500,000 customers at 7 million locations across 170 countries

 

                  37,000 sales resource

 

                  90,000 business partners

 

                  59 major global delivery centers

 

                  2,000 I/T architects

 

                  39 product development laboratories in 12 countries

 

18



 

We Continue to Show Progress in Key Growth Initiatives…

 

Emerging Countries

 

China

 

 

India

 

FY05

Russia

 

$4B

Brazil

 

+14% YTY

 

Business Performance Transformation

 

Business Transformation

 

 

Strategy & Change

 

FY05

Engineering & Technology

 

$4B

Bus Perf Mgmt Software

 

+28% YTY

 

New Markets

 

Retail on Demand

 

FY05

Sensors & Actuators

 

~$1B

Info Based Medicine

 

>100% YTY

 

Note: Year-to-Year growth @ CC excludes PCs

 

19



 

which Combined with Acquisitions Contributed over $9B of Revenue, up $3.5B Year-to-Year

 

Emerging Countries

 

China

 

 

India

 

FY05

Russia

 

$4B

Brazil

 

+14% YTY

 

New Markets

 

Retail on Demand

 

FY05

Sensors & Actuators

 

~$1B

Info Based Medicine

 

>100% YTY

 

Business Performance Transformation

 

Business Transformation

Strategy & Change

 

FY05

Engineering & Technology

 

$4B

Bus Perf Mgmt Software

 

+28% YTY

 

Acquisitions

 

Business Integration

 

 

Web-Enabled Software

 

FY05

Business Transformation

 

$1B

Application on Demand

 

+1 pt

 

Note: Year-to-Year growth @ CC excludes PCs

 

20



 

Our Recent Acquisitions Have Common Strategic Characteristics

 

[LOGO]

 

Strategic Acquisition targets are…

 

                  enabled by powerful cash generation

 

                  able to leverage IBM’s global infrastructure

 

                  generally product-like

 

                  highly scalable

 

                  in growth areas

 

                  a form of new product development

 

21



 

IBM’s Strategic Acquisitions Deliver Profitable Growth

 

                  Between 2002-2004 we completed 24 acquisitions priced below $500M

 

                  Fit our strategic profile

 

Estimated Acquisition Revenue Growth

 

[CHART]

 

                  Estimated Financial Performance:

 

      Revenue 5Yr CGR

 

>25

%

 

 

 

 

      IRR

 

>20

%

 

 

 

 

      Accretive

 

Year 2

 

Estimated Acquisition PTI Margin

 

[CHART]

 

22



 

                  Between 2002-2004 we completed 24 acquisitions priced below $500M

 

                  Fit our strategic profile

 

Estimated Acquisition Revenue Growth

 

[CHART]

 

                  Estimated Financial Performance:

 

      Revenue 5Yr CGR

 

>25

%

 

 

 

 

      IRR

 

>20

%

 

 

 

 

      Accretive

 

Year 2

 

 

 

•     Earnings excl intangibles

 

Year 1

 

 

 

      Substantial PTI Improvement

 

1st 3 Years

 

Estimated Acquisition PTI Margin

 

[CHART]

 

23



 

We Have Proven Success Integrating Our Acquisitions into the Business

 

[LOGO]

 

                  Acquired June 2004

                  Purchase Price $155M

                  5,500 resources

 

Globally leverage Business Process Outsourcing (BPO) in India

 

2005 Performance

 

Revenue

 

~ $130M

YTY%

 

>60%

PTI %

 

~ 20%

 

24



 

[LOGO]

 

                  Acquired June 2004

                  Purchase Price $155M

                  5,500 resources

 

Globally leverage Business Process Outsourcing (BPO) in India

 

2005 Performance

 

Revenue

 

~ $130M

YTY%

 

>60%

PTI %

 

~ 20%

 

[LOGO]

 

                  Acquired June 2004

                  Purchase Price $431M

 

To enhance IBM’s breadth and depth in middleware required for on demand solutions

 

2005 Performance

 

Revenue

 

~ $300M

YTY%

 

>25%

PTI %

 

>20%

 

25



 

[LOGO]

 

                  Acquired June 2004

                  Purchase Price $155M

                  5,500 resources

 

Globally leverage Business Process Outsourcing (BPO) in India

 

2005 Performance

 

Revenue

 

~ $130M

YTY%

 

>60%

PTI %

 

~ 20%

 

[LOGO]

 

                  Acquired June 2004

                  Purchase Price $431M

 

To enhance IBM’s breadth and depth in middleware required for on demand solutions

 

2005 Performance

 

Revenue

 

~ $300M

YTY%

 

>25%

PTI %

 

>20%

 

[LOGO]

 

                  Acquired October 2002

                  Purchase Price $125M

 

To enhance IBM’s identity management security management software

 

2005 Performance

 

Revenue

 

~ $110M

YTY%*

 

>10%

PTI%

 

>10%

 

*  3-year CGR 47%

 

26



 

Leveraging Global Capabilities and Cash to Deliver Growth and Returns to Shareholders

 

Investing Globally for Organic Growth

 

Improving Growth through

Research Development & Engineering

 

Strategic Acquisitions

 

 

 

[CHART]

 

[CHART]

 

Shareholder Returns via Dividends and Share Repurchase

 

Dividend Payment History

 

Share Repurchase History

 

 

 

[CHART]

 

[CHART]

 

27



 

Our Long-Term Business Objectives

 

                  Drive revenue growth through new markets, new offerings and new products both developed and acquired

 

                  Focus on productivity to improve margin

 

                  Deploy cash to fund growth and provide shareholder returns via dividends / buybacks

 

Deliver 10-12% Earnings per Share Growth
over the Long-term

 

28



 

IBM Global Briefing

 

 

 

 

 

Bangalore, India

 

[LOGO]

 

 

 

June 6 & 7, 2006

 

 

 

29



 

Non-GAAP Supplementary Materials
June 7, 2006

 



 

Non-GAAP Supplementary Materials

 

 

In an effort to provide investors with additional information regarding the company's results as determined by generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP), the company also discussed the following non-GAAP information which management believes provides useful information to investors.

 

 

Constant Currency

 

Management refers to growth rates at constant currency or adjusting for currency so that the business results can be viewed without the impact of changing foreign currency exchange rates, thereby facilitating period-to-period comparisons of the Company's business performance.  Generally, when the dollar either strengthens or weakens against other currencies, the growth at constant currency rates or adjusting for currency will be higher or lower than growth reported at actual exchange rates.

 

2



 

Non-GAAP Supplementary Materials

 

Non-recurring Items/Special Actions

 

Management has presented certain financial results excluding the effects of the following one-time items: (1) a 2Q 2005 gain on the sale of the company’s PC business, (2) a 2Q 2005 gain related to a settlement agreement reached with Microsoft, (3) 2Q 2005 charges related to the company’s restructuring initiatives, (4) a one-time 3Q 2005 tax charge for the repatriation of foreign earnings, (5) a 4Q 2005 one-time curtailment charge relating to changes to the company’s U.S. defined benefit pension plans, (6) a one-time charge recorded in 3Q 2004 for the partial settlement of certain legal claims related to IBM’s pension plan and (7) the operational performance of the company’s divested PC business. Given the unique and non-recurring nature of these items, management believes that presenting certain financial information without these items is more representative of the company's operational performance and provides additional insight into, and clarifies the basis for, historical and/or future performance, which may be more useful for investors.

 

Additionally, the company has presented certain financial results excluding the effects of special actions in 1999, 2002 and 2005. Given the unique and non-recurring nature of these items (both gains and losses), management believes that presenting certain financial results without the effects of such actions is more representative of the company's operational performance and year-over-year dynamics.

 

3



 

Non-GAAP Supplementary Materials

 

Divested PC Business

 

On April 30, 2005, IBM sold its PC business. Management believes that it is important to investors to understand the financial results of the company adjusted for the impact of its divested PCD operations in order to show IBM’s results on a comparable basis year-to-year, and to best present ongoing operational performance. Accordingly, management has presented certain financial results excluding the effects of the PC business.

 

Consistent with the company's management system, its reportable segments include transactions between segments that are intended to reflect an arm's-length transfer price and include intercompany profit. Management believes that a more appropriate measure of the financial impacts that the divestiture of the PC business has on IBM's consolidated financial results should exclude any revenues associated with internal sales and intercompany profits, which are eliminated in consolidation. Accordingly, the results of the PC business have been adjusted from the reported PC segment. The basis for these adjustments are to give effect to intercompany and certain allocated expenses and the adjusted results are intended to display the impact on the IBM consolidated results on a basis comparable to which the company operates post-PC divestiture which management believes is meaningful and useful to investors.

 

4



 

Non-GAAP Supplementary Materials

 

Management View of Cash Flow

 

Management includes a presentation of cash flows that excludes the effect of Global Financing Receivables and subtracts net capital investments from Net Cash from Operations.   For a financing business, increasing receivables is the basis for growth.  Receivables are viewed as an investment and an income-producing asset.  Capital investments are necessary to grow and sustain the business. Therefore, management presents financing receivables as an investing activity, which currently has the effect of lowering cash from operations, and net capital investments as a reduction of Net cash from Operations.  Management’s view is that this presentation gives the investor the best perspective of cash available for new investment, in addition to our capital expenditures, or for distribution to shareholders.

 

Additionally, management has presented its view of cash flow excluding the effects of funding of its U.S. pension plans. Given the unique nature of such pension fundings and the  complexity and volatility associated with the accounting and financial reporting for  pension plans, management believes that presenting these financial items without such fundings is useful to investors in better understanding the company’s business performance. The Company believes the magnitude of these impacts can affect investors’ understanding of the Company’s overall business performance.  Management further believes that investors’ understanding is enhanced when the year-to-year dynamics is rendered explicit in the discussion of the Company’s financial results.

 

5



 

Non-GAAP Supplementary Materials

 

Stock-based Compensation

 

Additionally, certain financial results have been restated to reflect the company’s adoption of expensing of stock-based compensation in 2005. However, given certain data limitations, selected financial results (gross margin, expense to revenue ratio and cash flows from operations) from 1995 – 2000 have been presented without the effects of equity compensation in those years.

 

Estimated PTI for Acquisitions

 

Management presents selected references of estimated pre-tax income (PTI) margin for acquired entities, with and with out amortization expense of acquired intangible assets. Management believes that presenting such results without the non-cash amortization expense of acquired intangible assets is more representative of the acquired entity's operational performance and IBM’s return on its investment, which may be more useful for investors.

 

6



 

Reconciliation of Gross Profit Margin (GPM) and Expense to Revenue Ratio (E:R), excluding Special Actions

 

 

 

1999

 

2002

 

2004

 

2005

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

GPM, excluding effects of Special Actions

 

37.2

%

36.6

%

36.9

%

40.1

%

Effects of Special Actions

 

(0.2

)

 

 

 

GPM, as reported

 

37.0

%

36.6

%

36.9

%

40.1

%

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

E:R, excluding effects of Special Actions

 

26.4

%

26.7

%

25.5

%

26.5

%

Effects of Special Actions

 

(3.5

)

2.7

 

0.4

 

0.2

 

E:R, as reported

 

22.9

%

29.4

%

25.9

%

26.7

%

 

The above serves to reconcile the Non-GAAP financial information on Slides 5 and 10 of Mark Loughridge’s “The IBM Model” Presentation. See Slide 3 of this presentation for additional information on the use of these non-GAAP financial measures.

 

7



 

Reconciliation of 2005 Segment Revenue and Pre-Tax Income Mix, excluding Special Actions and PC’s

 

 

 

Hardware
& Financing

 

Services

 

Software

 

Revenue

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

2005 Segment Revenue Mix, excluding PC’s

 

53

%

27

%

20

%

Effects of PC Revenue

 

(1

)

2

 

(1

)

2005 Segment Revenue Mix

 

52

%

29

%

19

%

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Pre-tax Income Mix

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

2005 Segment Pre-tax Income Mix, excluding Special Actions and PC’s

 

35

%

28

%

37

%

Effects of PC’s and Special Actions

 

(5

)

1

 

5

 

2005 Segment Pre-Tax Income Mix

 

30

%

29

%

42

%

 

The above serves to reconcile the Non-GAAP financial information on Slide 11 of Mark Loughridge’s “The IBM Model” Presentation, Slides 5 through 9 of Mark Loughridge’s “Financial Model” Presentation, Slide 5 of Bill Zeitler’s “IBM Systems and Technology” Presentation, Slide 5 of Steve Mills’ “IBM Software 2006 Update”, Slides 5 and 6 of Mike Daniels’ “Global Technology Services” Presentation and Slide 4 of Ginny Rometti’s “Global Business Services” Presentation . See Slides 3 and 4 of this presentation for additional information on the use of these non-GAAP financial measures.

 

8



 

Reconciliation of Earnings Per Share (EPS), excluding Special Actions

 

 

 

2004

 

2005

 

EPS from Continuing Operations, excluding effects of Special Actions

 

$

4.50

 

$

5.32

 

Effects of Special Actions

 

(0.11

)

(0.40

)

EPS from Continuing Operations, as reported

 

$

4.39

 

$

4.91

*

 

 

 

 

 

 

EPS Growth, excluding effects of Special Actions

 

20

%

18

%

Effects of Special Actions

 

(3

)

(6

)

EPS Growth, as reported

 

17

%

12

%


* May not add due to rounding

 

The above serves to reconcile the Non-GAAP financial information on Slide 13 of Mark Loughridge’s “Financial Model” Presentation. See Slide 3 of this presentation for additional information on the use of these non-GAAP financial measures.

 

9



 

Reconciliation of Management View of Cash Flow

 

$ in Billions

 

1999*

 

2000

 

2001

 

2002

 

2003

 

2004

 

2005

 

Management View of Cash Flow, excluding U.S. Pension Funding

 

$

5.9

 

$

6.7

 

$

6.8

 

$

8.0

 

$

8.7

 

$

9.8

 

$

11.3

 

Plus: U.S. Pension Funding

 

 

 

 

(2.1

)

 

(0.7

)

(1.7

)

Management View of Cash Flow

 

5.9

 

6.7

 

6.8

 

5.9

 

8.7

 

9.1

 

9.6

 

Plus: Global Financing Receivables

 

(1.7

)

(2.5

)

2.0

 

3.3

 

1.9

 

2.5

 

1.8

 

Less: Capital Expenditures, net

 

(4.8

)

(4.3

)

(4.9

)

(4.6

)

(3.9

)

(3.7

)

(3.5

)

Net Cash from Operations, as reported

 

$

9.0

 

$

8.6

 

$

13.7

 

$

13.8

 

$

14.5

 

$

15.3

 

$

14.9

 


* Does not include effects of equity compensation expensing. See Slide 6 of this presentation for additional information.

 

  May not add due to rounding

 

The above serves to reconcile the Non-GAAP financial information on Slides 14 and 15 of Mark Loughridge’s “Financial Model” Presentation. See Slides 5 and 6 of this presentation for additional information on the use of these non-GAAP financial measures.

 

10



 

Reconciliation of Revenue, Revenue Growth and Pre-Tax Margin in Emerging Countries, excluding PCs
and at Constant Currency (CC)

 

[CHART]

 

[CHART]

 

The above serves to reconcile the Non-GAAP financial information on Slides 19 and 20 of Mark Loughridge “Financial Model” Presentation as well as select remarks made during such presentation. See Slides 2 and 4 of this presentation for additional information on the use of these non-GAAP financial measures.

 

11



 

Reconciliation of Revenue Growth, excluding PCs and at Constant Currency (CC)

 

[CHART]

 

[CHART]

 

The above serves to reconcile Non-GAAP financial remarks made during Mark Loughridge’s “Financial Model” Presentation. See Slides 2 and 4 of this presentation for additional information on the use of these non-GAAP financial measures.

 

12