Thursday, August 17th 2023

Lenovo Group Releases First Quarter Results 2023/24

Lenovo Group today announced first quarter results, reporting Group revenue of US$12.9 billion and net income of US$191 million on a non-Hong Kong Financial Reporting Standards (HKFRS) basis. Revenue from the non-PC businesses accounted for 41% of Group revenue, with the service-led business achieving strong growth and sustained profitability - further demonstrating the effectiveness of Lenovo's intelligent transformation strategy.

The Group continues to take proactive actions to keep its Expenses-to-Revenue (E/R) ratio resilient and drive sustainable profitability, whilst also investing for growth and transformation. It remains committed to doubling investment in innovation in the mid-term, including an additional US$1 billion investment over three years to accelerate artificial intelligence (AI) deployment for businesses around the world - specifically AI devices, AI infrastructure, and AI solutions.
Despite the past quarter's challenging market and unfavorable macroeconomic conditions, Lenovo sees signs of market stabilization and improvement, component prices bottoming out, and believes the client device market can be expected to recover and resume growth in the second half of this fiscal year.

Chairman and CEO quote - Yuanqing Yang:
"Last quarter, the macro environment presented challenges, and our hardware business remained in a phase of adjustment, but we persisted in executing our strategy. Our service-led business achieved strong growth and sustained profitability. Our non-PC revenue mix of the group revenue further increased year on year - demonstrating the effectiveness of our diversified growth engines and I remain cautiously optimistic about our business recovery over the next several quarters. As we continue to drive innovation and intelligent transformation, I am confident in the long-term position to deliver sustainable profitability and growth in the future."

Further US$1 billion Investment in AI builds on existing leadership
Lenovo continues to embrace AI from all aspects, having built its advantages in computing power from client to edge to cloud and network. Breakthroughs in Large Language Models and AI generated content mark a major leap in AI development and application and serve as a catalyst and accelerator that are boosting the adoption of AI. Over the next three years, Lenovo is committing a further US$1 billion in investment for AI that will focus on providing AI devices, AI-ready and AI-optimized computing infrastructure, and embedded AI generated content into the intelligent solutions of vertical industries to help customers improve their productivity.

The Infrastructure Solutions Group (ISG) business' comprehensive AI portfolio has seen it ranked number three in the world for AI hardware infrastructure. It is also leading the way in designing the next generation of AI systems powered by NVIDIA. The Lenovo ThinkSystem SR675 V3 server will soon include the newly announced NVIDIA L40S GPUs that will help professionals worldwide advance AI and bring generative AI applications like intelligent chatbots, search, and summarization tools to users across industries. ISG is investing US$100 million to further grow its AI innovators program which has already delivered >150 cutting edge AI solutions, over 70 AI-optimized platforms, with 45 ISV partners in its first year.

The Solutions and Services Group (SSG) is using AI extensively across its portfolio, including AI-powered device intelligence for predictive support, generative AI agents embedded in its services desk offering, and vertical solutions augmented by AI.

The Intelligent Devices Group (IDG) business has integrated AI across all aspects of its device lifecycle, from using AI to mine user insights to be used in product design and analysis; pre-production screening for code vulnerabilities; manufacturing, including parts planning, quality inspections, and optimization. Looking ahead, Lenovo is leading the transformative shift in personal computing - where, to meet the needs of new generative AI workloads, the PC will also need to transform itself into an AI PC. Lenovo sees the future of AI PCs as a disruptive, hybrid blend of client, edge, and cloud technologies, ushering in enhanced functionality, speed, creativity, and immersive realistic experiences.

At an operations level, Lenovo uses AI across the company's smart manufacturing, supply chain, customer service, and more to drive efficiency, forecasting, and decision-making.

Solutions and Services Group (SSG): high margin, strong growth
Opportunity:

Over the next three years, the trend of digital and intelligent transformation will continue to drive strong growth of global IT spending, especially in IT services. At the same time, overall demand for vertical solutions, including smart city, smart manufacturing, smart education, and smart retail is expecting strong growth through 2026.

Q1 FY23/24 performance:

SSG is delivering strong growth and high profitability, with revenue of US$1.7 billion, up 18% year-on-year with a high operating margin of more than 21%.
The support services business was protected as the core profit engine, while at the same time significant progress was made in expanding Managed Services, and Projects and Solutions services, which together now make up more than half of SSG's revenue (up 4 points year-on-year).
SSG continues to build a strong pipeline of business for Digital Workplace Solutions.
Sustainable Growth:

SSG is embracing the trend in aaS (as-a-Service), digital workplace, sustainability services, and hybrid cloud, scaling its hero offerings and incubating these horizontal building blocks into vertical solutions to help customers improve employee experience and productivity.

Infrastructure Solutions Group (ISG): delivering growth in key areas
Opportunity:

Driven by strong AI demand, the ICT infrastructure upgrade is accelerating even further. There is also strong growth expected in services, edge, and enterprise software.

Q1 FY23/24 performance:

Revenue declined year-on-year (US$1.9 billion, down 8% year-on-year) due to the overall Cloud Service Provider (CSP) server compute demand softness, GPU constraints impacting full AI demand and the industry's slower than expected transition to the next-generation platform.
ISG achieved hyper-growth in Storage, Software, Services, and High-Performance Computing (HPC) - with storage achieving triple-digit year-on-year growth, making Lenovo the 4th largest storage provider in the world.
ISG continues to excel in AI, with triple-digit growth in the second half of 2022 with industry research ranking the business as number three in the world for AI hardware infrastructure.
Sustainable Growth:

Lenovo will continue to invest in developing AI-ready and AI-optimized infrastructure, such as AI Edge, AI Hybrid Cloud, and server and storage that support AI-centric workloads.
ISG remains focused on extending its vision as the most trusted infrastructure partner for customers in their digital and intelligent transformation.

Intelligent Devices Group (IDG): maintaining leadership
Opportunity:

While the smart devices market remains under pressure, there are new opportunities in the smart spaces market and next generation of AI devices.

Q1 FY23/24 performance:

Revenue declined year-to-year to US$10.3 billion (down 28% year-on-year) due to market challenges, but Lenovo maintained its global No.1 market share position in PCs (23.2%).
The smartphone business achieved a 10-year record for Q1 activations and further strengthened its premium and 5G offerings with the launch of the new motorola razr family.
Demonstrated great growth potential in smart collaboration and smart home areas.
Sustainable Growth:

Committed to investing in innovation to build long-term competitiveness, including building the next generation of AI devices.
The smartphone three-year growth plan is helping to achieve premium growth in strongholds of North America and Latin America, as well as hypergrowth across Asia Pacific and EMEA.
IDG continues to expand to a more diversified smart devices portfolio, including enriched software and services to further build the IDG ecosystem.
Source: Lenovo
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7 Comments on Lenovo Group Releases First Quarter Results 2023/24

#1
mb194dc
Results look bloody awful at face value.

Guess they'll have to drop a lot of AI mentions on the call. Sigh.
Posted on Reply
#2
FreedomEclipse
~Technological Technocrat~
22/23 - we were either in the pandemic, or just coming out of the pandemic. Everybody was scrambling to try and pick up a device be it a computer, laptop, tablet or mobile etc etc so the results for those years are no surprise.

Their profits are probably going to continue to drop as everyone who was going to buy a device has bought one and wont need another for a long time.
Posted on Reply
#3
tommo1982
"... 41% income from non-PC..." does thet mean workstations and servers? To be honest I didn't know Lenovo was making servers. What else does "non-PC" could mean?
Posted on Reply
#4
TheLostSwede
News Editor
tommo1982"... 41% income from non-PC..." does thet mean workstations and servers? To be honest I didn't know Lenovo was making servers. What else does "non-PC" could mean?
Well, they own the Motorola phone brand among other things, but yes, it appears to include servers and services as well.
Posted on Reply
#5
cvaldes
tommo1982"... 41% income from non-PC..." does thet mean workstations and servers? To be honest I didn't know Lenovo was making servers. What else does "non-PC" could mean?
The Lenovo Wikipedia entry summarizes their business operations. Yes, servers and supercomputers, but also things like wearables, IoT gadgets and the aforementioned phones. I think Lenovo was the OEM for my Oculus Rift S VR HMD as well.

Many of these large companies have a much larger footprint than their consumer offerings.

Just like Nvidia's data center business is larger than its graphics card business. Or Iwatani's butane cartridge business (for tabletop stoves) is about 3% of the company's total revenue.

Stuff like that.

Lenovo is a publicly traded company on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange. I don't know anything about Chinese security law, but most likely they are required to routinely publish some sort of documentation about their operations, like SEC filings in the USA. So read that stuff if you're interested.
Posted on Reply
#6
tommo1982
cvaldesThe Lenovo Wikipedia entry summarizes their business operations. Yes, servers and supercomputers, but also things like wearables, IoT gadgets and the aforementioned phones. I think Lenovo was the OEM for my Oculus Rift S VR HMD as well.

Many of these large companies have a much larger footprint than their consumer offerings.

Just like Nvidia's data center business is larger than its graphics card business. Or Iwatani's butane cartridge business (for tabletop stoves) is about 3% of the company's total revenue.

Stuff like that.

Lenovo is a publicly traded company on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange. I don't know anything about Chinese security law, but most likely they are required to routinely publish some sort of documentation about their operations, like SEC filings in the USA. So read that stuff if you're interested.
Those documents are beyond my scope of understanding. I was simply surprised by the "non-PC" phrase. I guess I included unconsciously wearables, tablets, smartphones, thus my surprise.
Posted on Reply
#7
cvaldes
tommo1982Those documents are beyond my scope of understanding. I was simply surprised by the "non-PC" phrase. I guess I included unconsciously wearables, tablets, smartphones, thus my surprise.
Well, you might want to keep reading these types of documents to get more familiar with the language.

They are published for investors and potential investors. When you invest in a company, it's a good thing to know what they do, how they make money, and what the risks are. I don't know where you are located but here in the USA, most Americans will end up in retirement with the help of some investments.

If you are interested in the technology industry, you might want to focus on those companies. Even if you are not a direct investor, it's probably good to understand that these companies generally aren't pure plays and have multiple business units to handle a wide variety of markets beyond Joe Consumer and the stuff you see advertised on TV, Instagram, whatever.

It should be no surprise to anyone (paying attention) that Lenovo has a substantial business other than consumer-facing PC products.
Posted on Reply
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