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By Stephen Shankland
Posted on ZDNet News: Jun 15, 2004 11:49:00 PM

update Red Hat on Tuesday announced expected earnings per share that are 1 cent better than analysts have forecast for its most recent quarter, citing growth in subscriptions to its Enterprise Linux software.

That word comes two days before the Raleigh, N.C.-based Linux maker is scheduled to announce financial results for the first quarter of its fiscal year 2005--and one day after it announced a surprise resignation plan for CFO Kevin Thompson.


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The resignation news sent Red Hat's stock down in after-hours trading Monday. It fared somewhat better Tuesday, closing down $2.24, or 9 percent, to $22.06.

Red Hat said it expects net income of $10 million, or 5 cents per share, which would surpass the average projection of 4 cents per share by analysts surveyed by First Call.

The resignation raised analyst eyebrows on Monday, but W.R. Hambrecht analyst Victor Raisys said that, after speaking with Red Hat, he believes nothing is amiss.

"After speaking with company management, we believe the company, in an effort to provide full disclosure to investors, genuinely misjudged market reaction to the timing of the announcement. We accept the company’s statements at face value and do not believe there are additional underlying reasons for the odd timing of the announcement," Raisys wrote in a report Tuesday. "The company didn't expect the market response."

However, Raisys, who rates Red Hat a "hold," said he views the change "as a negative data point for Red Hat, as we expect we will see some short-term disruptions in the business during the search and transition for a new CFO.

The company sold 98,000 subscriptions to Red Hat Enterprise Linux, an increase over the 87,000 subscriptions it said it sold three months earlier. The average price was $430 per subscription per year, a drop from the $455 of three months ago.

Of the subscriptions, 75,000 went to businesses and 23,000 went to a category that pays less: Web hosting companies and high-performance technical computing customers.

Red Hat said it will post full financial results Thursday.

Red Hat said it expects operating income of $6.3 million, a figure that excludes $1.6 million in stock-based compensation.

Analysts surveyed by First Call expected revenue of $43 million. Red Hat didn't explicitly release revenue figures, but said that its $6.3 million in operating income was about 15 percent of revenue, which would place revenue around $42 million.

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  • Most Recent of 9 Talkback(s)
The Buffet style - NOT
A prime example of why there are no stock traders among the 500 richest Americans. Jump in on seemingly good news, out on seemingly bad - beat the herd, of which we're a part.

As Warren Buffet... (Read the rest)
Posted by: IT_User Posted on: 06/15/04 You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
The reference is somewhat dated  quietLee | 06/15/04
What a joke ZDNet is...  mdailey | 06/15/04
Ok, but don't shoot the messenger.  DonnieBoy | 06/15/04
I'll wait for the real numbers.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 06/15/04
Good idea  Michael Kelly | 06/15/04
A man after my own heart.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 06/15/04
An essential function  Jay Cash | 06/15/04
The Buffet style - NOT  IT_User | 06/15/04
"Red Hat plays spin doctor..." ??? Editor expecting crap hit fan???  Spin_Masterz | 06/15/04

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