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IBM Finds Fans in a Market Where Boring Is Rewarded

(Bloomberg) -- It’s been decades since investors looked on IBM as an exciting tech stock, but with high-growth shares plunging this year, that lack of flashiness has become one of its most-desired qualities.

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International Business Machines Corp.’s low valuation, high dividend yield, and cash flow have helped the stock outperform the broader technology sector in an environment marked by high inflation, which has led to rising interest rates and concern a recession is looming. Those attributes could be on display Wednesday as IBM, which offers infrastructure, cloud, and IT services, reports third-quarter results.

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Shares of IBM rose 1.6% on Tuesday.

The stock has a price-earnings multiple of 12.6, compared with 19 for an index of tech stocks in the S&P 500. Apple Inc. and Microsoft Corp. trade for about 22 times earnings. IBM also has an indicated dividend yield of 5.4%. Among components of the S&P 500 tech index, that’s second only to Intel Corp., the chipmaker mired in a difficult environment for semiconductor stocks.

“I’m of the mind that I’m going to own tech stocks if their valuations are reasonable and I can touch the cash flow, which takes me to lower PE tech like IBM,” said Bob Doll, chief investment officer at Crossmark Global Investments. “I’d rather own these companies than those that got bloated and had a crazy valuation.”

IBM has dropped 4.2% this year including reinvested dividends, versus a 28% drop for the S&P 500 tech index. According to data compiled by Bloomberg, value, profitability, and dividends have been among the best performing factors for tech stocks this year, with volatility and growth the weakest.

The backdrop represents a switch from the years where rapid growth was the favored metric for tech investors, an environment that led to massive gains for buzzy unprofitable stocks, and also had Big Blue lagging behind legacy peers like Microsoft Corp. and Apple Inc.

While IBM may be an oasis of stability in the short term, the lack of growth that kept it from the multi-year rally in tech could also hold the stock back when the market turns. Even Crossmark’s Doll, who owns the stock, said he wasn’t “pounding the table” with enthusiasm and doesn’t expect to be a long-term holder of IBM.

Analysts predict the company will report revenue growth of 2.5% in 2023, below the 3.8% pace of the tech sector, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The gap is expected to be even wider in 2024, with the 5.2% growth expected at IBM less than half the 11.9% pace predicted for the overall sector.

“IBM’s dividend has supported investors over the past year, but who knows if that will continue to be the case,” said Robert Stimpson, chief investment officer of Oak Associates, which has been cutting its position in IBM.

“Because fixed-income investors can get more yield out of a 10-year Treasury now, a dividend tech stock isn’t as attractive if it doesn’t have incremental growth opportunities. We still like tech, but other big names look more attractive here.”

Tech Chart of the Day

The selloff in tech stocks this year has reduced the sector’s weighting within the S&P 500 to about 26%, near its lowest level since May 2021. The tech sector has lost about 30% of its value in 2022, compared with the 23% decline for the overall S&P 500.

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  • Uber Technologies Inc. will offer consumers delivery within minutes on orders from frozen-grocery chain Iceland Foods, in its first “quick commerce” partnership in the UK.

  • California has generated the most initial public offerings of any US state every year since 2003. That streak could end this year unless the Golden State picks up the pace. The state’s change of fortune is explained largely by the drop in valuations among Silicon Valley’s tech startups, said Jay Ritter of the University of Florida.

  • Singapore’s Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong warned the US decision to curb supply of microchips to Chinese companies could have widespread consequences and greater decoupling between the top two economies may create a “less stable world.”

  • Foxconn Technology Group took the wraps off two new electric vehicles on Tuesday, prototypes that embody the iPhone maker’s ambitions of carving out a slice of a market led by the likes of Tesla Inc.

  • Ye, formerly known as Kanye West, said he was motivated to acquire the conservative social media service Parler by his belief that existing platforms like Instagram and Twitter are too restrictive when it comes to user speech.

  • Indian edtech Byju’s said it has raised $250 million from existing investors led by the sovereign wealth fund Qatar Investment Authority, days after announcing job cuts in a bid to slash costs.

(Updates to market open.)

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