Boston, Jan 17 : Warning to investors: major U.S. technology companies could miss 
estimates for fourth-quarter earnings as "fiscal cliff" worries likely led some 
corporate clients to tighten their belts last month and refrain from spending 
all of their 2012 IT budgets.
Tech companies usually enjoy a spike in 
orders in December as corporations use money left over in their budgets to buy 
goods on their wish lists - information technology products that are nice to 
have, rather than essential.
But the so-called year-end budget flush was 
not as deep in 2012 as in typical years, according to tech analysts and other 
experts citing conversations with corporate technology buyers and sales sources. 
They said companies held back on IT purchases in December in part because of 
Washington's protracted negotiations to avoid the fiscal cliff, which is a 
package of automatic tax hikes and spending cuts that could have pushed the 
already soft U.S. economy into recession.
It took until late on January 1 
for House Republican lawmakers led by John Boehner to agree to a bill to avert 
the cliff, which President Barack Obama signed into law the next 
day.
"CIOs and CFOs were not making investments," said Andrew Bartels, an 
analyst with Forrester Research who advises corporate technology buyers. "If 
Boehner and Obama had been able to strike a deal by around December 15, we would 
have had end-of-quarter investments."
Analysts say they expect tech 
spending to remain subdued through at least the first quarter, as businesses 
wait to see if Congress can resolve another looming fiscal fight, this time over 
the debt ceiling and federal spending cuts.
Wall Street has already 
significantly lowered expectations for the tech sector, which has been 
underperforming the overall market.
The Street now expects tech companies 
in the S&P 500 to report a 1.0 percent drop in fourth-quarter earnings, 
against an average 2.8 percent rise for companies in the full S&P 500. Three 
months ago, analysts were expecting tech sector earnings to rise 9.4 percent in 
the fourth quarter.
First-quarter tech profit growth estimates have also 
been lowered to 2.6 percent, from 9 percent three months ago.
Greg 
Harrison, a corporate earnings research analyst, said he expects analysts will 
cut their predictions further after tech companies report fourth-quarter 
results.
Intel Corp will report its quarterly earnings on January 17, the 
first of a group of big tech companies reliant on enterprise spending. Intel 
will be followed by IBM, Microsoft Corp and EMC Corp later in January. Cisco 
Systems Inc, Dell Inc and Hewlett-Packard Co close their quarterly books in 
about a month.
Mark Luschini, chief investment strategist at Janney 
Montgomery Scott, which manages about $54 billion, said he generally expects 
fourth-quarter tech results to disappoint, but has yet to determine by how 
much.
He expects the sluggish performance to continue into the first 
quarter, then improve in the second half of the year, assuming Democrats and 
Republicans reach a deal on the debt ceiling and spending cuts.
"So far 
we only have one piece," he said of the fiscal cliff deal.
Even if 
Washington politicians eventually resolve their differences over fiscal issues, 
that is not expected to fully restore losses already caused to tech spending, 
experts said.
Technology projects that were axed at the end of last year 
will not likely be resumed any time soon because annual tech budgets are 
allocated on a "use it or lose it" basis, according to experts who advise 
companies on technology investments.
"These budgets are based on how the 
business is doing at the time. All of these are postponable decisions," said 
Howard Anderson, a senior lecturer at the MIT Sloan School of Management and 
frequent adviser to chief investment officers at Fortune 500 
companies.
Analysts said that makers of hardware, from computers to 
networking gear, likely missed out on the year-end budget flush because 
businesses can postpone upgrades for years by buying new software that is 
compatible with older equipment.
They said they expect some companies to 
have postponed the purchase of new PCs in the fourth quarter, which could hit 
the results of Windows and Office maker Microsoft, along with PC makers Dell and 
HP, as well as chipmakers Intel and Advanced Micro Devices Inc.
Nucleus 
Research analyst Rebecca Wettemann said some businesses likely delayed buying 
new PCs to avoid having to upgrade to Windows 8, which was introduced late last 
year.
"A new operating system causes huge disruptions for businesses," 
she said. "Who wants to take that on in the face of all the other 
uncertainty?"
Microsoft, Dell, HP and Intel declined to comment. AMD did 
not return requests for comment.
Beyond concerns about the U.S. economy, 
corporate IT buyers are also worried about the potential for further weakness in 
Europe and Asia.
Forrester cut its closely watched forecast for 2013 
global IT sales, citing the fiscal cliff debacle as one reason. Forrester now 
expects global IT sales to rise 3.3 percent to $2.2 trillion this year, down 
from its previous forecast for 4.3 percent growth.
Analysts say the weak 
economy may boost adoption of recently introduced data storage technologies that 
allow companies to put more data on the equipment they already own, reducing the 
need for them to buy more hardware.
Some companies have already paid for 
that technology, but have yet to implement it because staff are not yet 
comfortable using it, said analyst Cindy Shaw of investment research firm 
Discern.
Shaw said that executives at those companies are likely to tell 
their IT staff to implement that technology to get full use out of existing 
equipment before they can buy more.
Storage equipment makers NetApp Inc 
and EMC, along with hard drive makers Western Digital Corp and Seagate 
Technology are likely to suffer the most from more use of the new technologies, 
which include storage virtualization. NetApp and Western Digital declined to 
comment. EMC and Seagate could not be reached for comment.
Defenders of 
the tech industry say the fallout from the fiscal cliff is already factored into 
share prices. The S&P 500 Information Technology Index has climbed 1.6 
percent over the past month, below the 4.0 percent increase in the broader 
S&P 500 Index.
Some technology companies appear poised to outperform 
the pack.
Oracle Corp said on December 18 that it expects software sales 
growth to stay strong in 2013 despite fears about the fiscal crisis. The 
company's earnings beat Wall Street forecasts in its most recent quarter as 
strong software sales offset a sharp drop in hardware revenue.
Analysts 
said that IBM, whose quarter ended December 31, may have fared better than other 
big technology companies, because it is has a large amount of recurring revenue 
from its services and software divisions.
"Oracle and IBM both have super 
strong sales teams that can bring home what they need to year after year," said 
Kim Forrest, senior analyst of Fort Pitt 
Capital.
Ends
SA/EN
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Analysis: Fiscal crisis seen hurting tech earnings
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