Lenovo Q3 – Narrow squeak.

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Lenovo can absorb Motorola and just avoid red ink

  • Lenovo will be skating on very thin ice when it absorbs Motorola as the handset maker is so unprofitable that it could push Lenovo into the red.
  • Lenovo reported good Q3 results as it gained share in PCs but margins remain wafer thin.
  • Q3 Revenues / Net income were $10.8bn / $265m compared to forecasts of $10.5bn / $244m.
  • Lenovo has done well in PCs gaining share again in all regions taking global share to 18.5%.
  • Share in smartphones was stable with 13.5m units shipped.
  • Despite the good news, margins remain wafer thin with EBIT of just $334m or 3.1%.
  • There is logic in taking on Motorola Mobility (see here) but it is going to put a massive dent in Lenovo’s very fragile profitability.
  • Motorola Mobility has been losing around $200m per quarter for the last few years and there is no sign of this changing.
  • Hence, when Lenovo takes on Motorola margins will immediately collapse to just 1.2%, all thing being equal.
  • Furthermore, I expect that large parts of Motorola’s existing operations will be closed down resulting in a restructuring charge of at least $500m.
  • Once the Motorola brand has been migrated to Lenovo’s existing products, then there should be some traction but it is going to take time.
  • Together Motorola and Lenovo had 6.4% of the smartphone market in Q4, moving into third position, just ahead of Huawei and LG.
  • This is not going to be enough to see decent profitability as Android is increasingly going to require scale to earn a reasonable return and so large swathes of market share will need to be won.
  • I estimate that to see a reasonable return on this investment, Lenovo needs to increase market share to at least 10%.
  • This will put some leverage into the business and allow margins to improve from the commodity margins earned by most of the Android camp.
  • The combination of Lenovo’s manufacturing and Motorola’s brand is a good start but a heavy sprinkling of marketing magic will be required to achieve a level of volume where margins will be acceptable.
  • Hence, I think that Lenovo’s margins are going to head south for at least the rest of 2014E and I am not at all confident that it can succeed where so many have failed.
  • That being said it has done a good job in PCs although it has been unable to lift profitability despite being the clear market leader.
  • Something special is needed if this is not to be a major disappointment and I would not be rushing to buy the shares of Lenovo just yet.

RICHARD WINDSOR

Richard is founder, owner of research company, Radio Free Mobile. He has 16 years of experience working in sell side equity research. During his 11 year tenure at Nomura Securities, he focused on the equity coverage of the Global Technology sector.