Credit strong IT spending in the rest of the world, as shown in Cisco's results, announced Tuesday. Quarterly net income edged up 4.4% to $2.0 billion, while revenue jumped 9.9% to $10.4 billion. The drivers: 30% growth in orders in China, 20% in India, and 19% in Asia Pacific. In the United States and Canada, growth was just 7%, though orders from large U.S. businesses rose 13%.
The mood brightened at SAP since its dour first quarter, when executives signaled cautious spending, including scaling back its ballyhooed software service plan. Though net profit was down 9%, partly because of the cost of acquiring Business Objects, most analysts backed co-CEO Henning Kagermann's call of "strong performance." Asia-Pacific sales rose 30% and U.S. sales 14%, which was faster than the 6% growth in the first quarter. That left SAP predicting full-year sales growth in the upper end of its earlier 25% to 27% estimate.
Other showings: IBM's net income rose 22% to $2.77 billion and sales increased 13% to $26.8 billion, prompting CEO Sam Palmisano to declare an "outstanding quarter." Nearly two-thirds of IBM's revenue comes from outside the U.S. At Intel, net income in the second quarter rose 25% to $1.6 billion, with revenues up 9 percent to $9.5 billion. Intel CEO Paul Otellini predicted "continued healthy demand."
Who's hurting? Sun's sales dropped 1.4%, and profits plunged 73% to $88 million. EDS cost-cut its way to 16% profit growth on a 3% sales bump. And Microsoft's 41% net income growth fell short of analysts' expectations. Office sales were up 19% and business server software 21%, though Windows Vista wasn't a blockbuster, and consumer, online, and entertainment lagged.
According to an InformationWeek survey of 600 U.S.-based business technology executives conducted last month, 40% said they decreased IT spending in the past quarter relative to their original 2008 budgets. You can dowload that report here (registration required). Tech vendors have the remaining 60% -- as well as those in growing regions outside the U.S. -- to thank for a mostly respectable quarter.
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