IBM\'s signings of new business at its services division surged 16 per cent in the second quarter, trouncing expectations and raising hopes that 2011 will be a good year for the technology sector. Investors had feared that technology sales would slow in the second half, hurt by the economic uncertainty in Europe and Japan, as well as a drop in government spending. But IBM offset those challenges with strong growth in developing markets from Brazil to China, and robust sales of a new line of mainframe computers. Analysts said the results marked a strong start to the tech earnings season, with other bellwethers such as Apple Inc, Intel Corp and Microsoft Corp set to report quarterly results in coming days. Article continues below \"As I look for the balance of the earnings reports this week, I think it\'s going to set a pretty good tone,\" said Keith Wirtz, chief investment officer for Fifth third Asset Management. International Business Machines Corp shares climbed two per cent to a record high on the news. The company also raised its full-year profit forecast after second-quarter results beat Wall Street estimates. \"Good service signings reflect that they are capturing their share of the solid IT spending that we\'re seeing in the market now,\" said Edward Jones analyst Josh Olson. \"IT spending and demand for software and services remains healthy despite all this economic turmoil, and businesses continue to invest in efficiency,\" he said. \"We\'re seeing that in these results.\" Beats expectations IBM said on Monday that signings rose to $14.3 billion during the second quarter, beating Wall Street projections and easing investor concerns after the closely watched number dropped in the first quarter. Deutsche Bank said in a research note that analysts on average had expected signings of $12 billion to $13 billion. Investors believe signings is a key indicator of future profits. But IBM says the focus should be more on total backlog of business, which grew by $15 billion during the quarter to $144 billion. some $8 billion of the $15 billion increase in backlog came from the developing economies that IBM defines as \"growth markets.\" Some investors had feared that corporations will keep a tight grip on 2011 technology budgets, waiting out the economic uncertainty in the United States and Europe. But developing markets drove top line growth for IBM. On a constant-currency basis, revenue leaped 13 per cent in growth markets — which includes the BRIC countries of Brazil, Russia, India and China — far outpacing the three per cent sales growth chalked up in so-called major markets. The growth in developing countries was led by sales to financial services firms and communications companies. \"We\'ve got real momentum in the financial service sector. It\'s a strong place for us,\" Chief Financial Officer Mark Loughridge said. He added that business in Europe had improved, with sales in Germany and Italy returning to growth during the quarter. IBM reported second-quarter profit, excluding items, of $3.09 per share, beating the average Wall Street forecast of $3.03, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S. Revenue rose 12 per cent from a year earlier to $26.67 billion, ahead of the average forecast of $25.35 billion. Shares in the Armonk, New York, company rose to $178.90 in extended trade on Monday, beating the previous record high of $177.76 on July 6.
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