The Chairman's Letter To Stockholders From The 2010 IBM Annual Report
The Chairman's Letter To Stockholders From The 2010 IBM Annual Report
The Chairman's Letter To Stockholders From The 2010 IBM Annual Report
I am pleased to report that IBM had another strong year in 2010. Your company continued to outperform our industry and the market at large. We once again achieved record pre-tax earnings, record earnings per share, record free cash ow and improved prot margins, with increased revenues. At the same time, we continued to deliver superior returns to you, our owners. Most importantly, we are well positioned to grow as the global economy recovers. These results were made possible by decisions and actions that we undertook a decade ago, based on where we believed the world was shifting. But even more, they are a reection of the mindset, ambitions and values that have guided IBM since its inception, 100 years ago. As such, our performance in 2010 marks a tting conclusion to our rst century as a corporation, and a promising start to our second. In this letter, I will explain why the long-term thinking and management that IBM has practiced over the past decade have positioned your company advantageously for the next ve years and beyond.
IBM today
IBMs performance in 2010 is indicative both of our high-value market position and of the discipline we apply to our strategy and operations. Since 2002, we have added $14 billion to IBMs pre-tax prot base, increased our pre-tax income 3.4 times, our earnings per share 4.7 times and our free cash ow 2.8 times. Cumulatively, we have generated about $96 billion of free cash ow. Our strong 2010 continued this record of superior performance:
Cash flow: IBM has consistently generated strong cash flow, a key indicator of real business performance. In 2010 our free cash flow, excluding the year-toyear change in Global Financing receivables, was $16.3 billion, an increase of $1.2 billion from 2009. IBM ended 2010 with $11.7 billion of cash and marketable securities. Investment and return to shareholders: Our superior cash flow has enabled us to invest in the business and to generate substantial returns to investors. Our 2010 cash investment was $6 billion for 17 acquisitions 13 of them in key areas of software. After investing $6 billion in R&D and $4 billion in net capital expenditures, we were able to return more than $18 billion to you$15.4 billion through share repurchases and $3.2 billion through dividends. Last years dividend increase was 18 percent, marking the 15th year in a row in which we have raised our dividend. Over the past decade, we have returned $107 billion to you in the form of dividends and share repurchases, while investing $70 billion in capital expenditures and acquisitions, and almost $60 billion in R&D.
Revenue and income: Our revenue was $99.9 billion, up 4 percent. In 2010 we grew pre-tax income by 9 percent, to $19.7 billion, our highest ever. Margins: IBMs gross profit margin rose for the seventh consecutive yearto 46.1 percent, up 9.4 points since 2002. Our pre-tax income margin rose to 19.7 percent. Both margins are at their highest in more than a decade. We achieved this by driving productivity and continuing to shift our business mix to more profitable segments. Once again, more than 90 percent of our segment profit in 2010 was from software, services and financing. Earnings per share: We have continued to achieve strong EPS growth. Last year was another record, with diluted earnings per share of $11.52, up 15 percent. This marked eight straight years of double-digit EPS growth.
Samuel J. Palmisano
Chairman, President and Chief Executive Ofcer
1. Changes in the world: The lowering of trade barriers, the rise of the developing world and the emergence of the World Wide Web were unleashing the ow of work on a global scale. We believed these changes were powerful and irreversible, and that they would lead to new high-growth market opportunities and a new form of the corporation itselfwhat we came to call the globally integrated enterprise. 2. Changes in technology: At the same time, a new model of computing was replacing the PC-based, client/server approach. Computational capability was being put into things no one would recognize as computers: phones, cameras, cars, appliances, roadways, power lines, clothesand even natural systems, such as agriculture and rivers. All of these were being connected. And we had developed the computing power and advanced analytics to turn mountains of data into insight. As a result, the economic, societal and physical systems of the world were becoming instrumented, interconnected and intelligent. Our planet was becoming smarter. 3. Changes in client demand: Driven by the new opportunities and competitive demands of these first two shifts, enterprises and institutions were no longer content with off-the-shelf technology. They now sought to innovatenot just in their products and services, but also their business processes, management systems, policies and core business models. To accomplish that, they needed to focus on the business outcomes that resulted from technological innovation.
Now that we have shown we can deliver results with consistency, we are doing it again through the introduction last year of our 2015 Road Map. 5
Because we believed that these shifts would change our industry, creating winners and losers, we transformed IBMs mix of products, services, skills and technologiesexiting commoditizing businesses like PCs and hard disk drives, and making 116 strategic acquisitions over the course of the decade, largely in software and services. We amassed substantial cross-industry expertise, and reinvented the way we deploy it, shifting skills and decision making closer to the marketplace and the client. We invested significantly more in our teams and capabilities in the developing world, and we accelerated the global integration of IBMs operations. We also worked to rebalance our internal R&D. Of the 5,896 U.S. patents IBM received in 2010 (once again a record for any company, and our 18th straight year of patent leadership), more than 70 percent were for software and services.
of productivity improvement over the next ve years. Part of that will go to our bottom line, and part will go to investments that improve our competitiveness in the marketplace. Secondly, we will continue returning value to you. Our road map calls for $50 billion in anticipated share repurchases and $20 billion in dividends. When it comes to the third component of our road map, we will focus on four growth priorities:
1. Growth Markets.
A historic economic expansion is underway in the emerging markets of the worldas their populations join the middle class and their economies join the global marketplace. These markets are expected to achieve average GDP growth of 5 percent through 2015, more than double the projected growth rate of the developed world. In the largest of these emerging markets, such as China, India and Brazil, IBM is broadening its well-established base of skills and capabilities, nearly doubling our number of branch locations. In less developed markets, such as Africa, we are leveraging anchor clients in sectors like communications and banking. Our recent partnership with Bharti Airtel to provide 21st century wireless telecommunications across 16 countries of SubSaharan Africa is one example. Our Growth Markets Unit accounted for 21 percent of IBMs geographic revenue in 2010. We are aiming to approach 30 percent by 2015.
4. Smarter Planet.
Put it all together, and you have what we mean by building a smarter planet. In 2008 and 2009, we articulated a point of view on ways the world can become smarter, and in 2010, we deployed significant resources to capture the opportunity in key, high-growth industriessuch as healthcare, retail, banking and telecommunicationswhere our experience and solution delivery is strongest. We also expanded our Smarter Cities initiative. Our road map calls for Smarter Planet solutions to grow to $10 billion in revenue by 2015.
By becoming a very different company from what we were just a few years ago, we have become much more like the company IBM has been for most of its history.
In sum, our superior strategic positioning, strong balance sheet, solid recurring revenue, robust prot streams and unmatched global reach give us condence that we will be able to continue achieving the same kinds of results in the next ve years that we have achieved during the past decade.
Over the last 10 years, we have nearly tripled our EPS, added $109 billion in free cash ow, returned $107 billion to you, tripled our software prots and increased the share of our revenue from growth markets from 11 to 21 percent, excluding divested PCs and printers. Over the next ve years, we expect to grow our operating (non-GAAP) earnings to at least $20 per share, to generate another $100 billion in free cash ow, to return an additional $70 billion to you, to grow our software prot to about half of total segment prot and to increase growth markets contribution to our revenue to nearly 30 percent. The information on pages 9 to 15Generating Higher Value at IBMsummarizes our road maps, places them in the context of IBMs 100 years of growth, and describes our opportunities in the coming era.
scale systems such as U.S. Social Security; and the farther reaches of scientific progress, from the exploration of space to the frontiers of genomics, bioinformatics and nanotechnology. Today, it encompasses the even broader range of work we describe as building a smarter planetoptimizing the enormously complex systems that enable services to be delivered; physical goods to be developed, manufactured, bought and sold; everything from people and money to oil, water and electrons to move; and billions of people to work and live.
Second, we have created the tools to do that ambitious work and to capture its economic opportunity.
In the early decades of IBMs life, this involved clocks, scales and punched card tabulators. It changed fundamentally with the dawn of the computer age, as IBM created many of its technological breakthroughs, from the relational database to the disk drive, DRAM, FORTRAN, the mainframe, the PC and much more. We built the worlds most productive industrial laboratoryhome to five Nobel Prize winners and generator of more U.S. patents than any other company in the world. And it continues today, with breakthroughs such as Watson, the computer that recently defeated the two all-time champions on the television quiz show, Jeopardy! Watsons vast analytic capacity represents a new stage in computings ability to tackle the worlds most pressing needs where and when they really emergein the natural language of healthcare, banking, government, retail and more.
First, we have foreseen the opportunities of our times, and made markets in them.
These have included the automation of modern retail, banking and air travel; the creation of population-
Finally, we have consistently built an organization that can sustainably deliver that kind of value.
This is nontrivial. Over the past century, many enterprises, institutions and governments have come and gone. IBMs longevity rests on our founders success in shaping a particular kind of organization. It was a company that mastered the creation of economic value from knowledge and information; that was truly globalwhatever that meant for each era; and that pioneered a new kind of relationship with society. Most importantly, IBMs leaders believed that a great company could only survive decades of change through the intentional creation of a vibrant culture, one grounded in shared beliefs and values. And they and subsequent generations of IBMers actually built it. That is the legacy of IBMs first century, and it continues to shape our company today. It is no accident that our growth strategies like Smarter Planet and Growth Markets are aimed at the most promising business and societal opportunities of our era. Nor is it surprising that we are pushing the frontiers of science and technology to achieve those ambitious goalsfrom analytics, to cloud, to new workload-specific computing models. It is also consistent with our DNA that we have paid equal attention to the continual reinvention of IBM itselfmost importantly, reexamining and applying our core values to how we run the company.
In a fundamental sense, by becoming a very different company from what we were just a few years ago, we have become much more like the company IBM has been for most of its history. As we start our second century, thats a good place to be. Let me close by expressing my pride in the worldwide IBM team for bringing us to this point, and my gratitude to you, our shareholders, for your unwavering support. I hope that you are pleased with how your company is performing and evolving. And I trust that you share our excitement about the future of an enterprise whose storied past is propelling us into an enormously promising future.
Samuel J. Palmisano
Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer
This letter includes selected references to certain non-GAAP financial measures that are made to facilitate a comparative view of the companys ongoing operational performance. For information about the companys financial results related to (i) free cash flow excluding Global Financing receivables and (ii) operating (non-GAAP) earnings, which are in each case non-GAAP measures, see the companys Form 8-K submitted to the SEC on January 18, 2011 (Attachment II Non-GAAP Supplementary Materials).
MARCH 2011