Thread regarding IBM layoffs

High watermark investments view

IBM is a bit of a unique case, given the portfolio churn the company has been witnessing. IBM appears to have straddled between an incumbent and challenger, finally settling in as a major player in the cloud integration (hybrid cloud space) still wanting to sell some of its own cloud. IBM shocked the markets last October with the announcement of its Red Hat deal. The surprise was more to do with the size of the deal that IBM was undertaking and for the asset that the company was purchasing.

The Cognitive Solutions business was IBM’s beacon of light; with the Red Hat buy, IBM gained more prominence in the hybrid cloud market. Recognizing the importance of keeping technology services business separate from its core cloud business, IBM had moved its core cloud business from within technology services and bundled it with the ‘Cognitive Solutions’ business. The combination of Cognitive and cloud is likely to help IBM productize much of the company’s technological prowess into its own cloud. Factors that favor IBM’s position in the evolving cloud market are:

The company’s long history of enterprise relationships (something extremely critical to scale up the cloud and the associated SI work), especially as the IBM helps its client wade the challenge beyond that of the ‘low hanging fruit’ of cloud migrations.

IBM’s commitment towards the cloud (the Red Hat acquisition is by far one of the largest deals in tech) appears to be quite serious and looks in line with that of a company looking to re-invent itself.

Some aspects that are also likely to contribute to IBM’s position in the overall cloud order are:

The Red Hat acquisition is likely to upend IBM’s business model from that of a large, legacy, enterprise software, hardware and services vendor to that of a leaner cloud and legacy solutions provider. The changes in the business model are likely to also necessitate management level changes to keep the momentum intact. As of the time of writing this article, Arvind Krishna, a three-decade IBM veteran, heads Cloud and Cognitive Software. Taking a cue from Microsoft’s history, IBM could significantly strengthen its position in the cloud/hybrid space, should the head of the cloud be also leading the broader portfolio of the company's assets to better align them with the overall company philosophy. Ginni Rometty’s absence from the last couple of earnings calls may just be the first hint of an imminent change. However, clarity about management will be paramount for IBM to be able to convince customers of the company’s technology vision to be that of a marathon rather than of a sprint.

With the Red Hat acquisition, IBM has been targeting the $1 trillion hybrid cloud market and it could make sense to not compete with the big public cloud players. However, as the world becomes increasingly multi-cloud, customers have been trying to avoid vendor lock-ins. IBM’s cloud is an excellent alternative for customers wanting to increase the diversification of their underlying base of assets while trusting IBM with the abstraction to be provided (hybrid management), to ensure standardization and smooth operations. However, to adopt this strategy, the management may need to enhance its messaging and steer clear of coming across as a competitor aiming to become one of the top three in the public cloud provider market.

Since the first half of the last year, the IBM management had been trying to build a narrative around the potential of its hybrid cloud strategy. Subsequently, while the core cloud business may have slowed a bit, the SI bookings have remained fairly strong. Expected closure of the Red Hat deal in the second half of this year and the IBM’s messaging around its cloud strategy could potentially make IBM stand out in the hybrid cloud world.

by
| 1194 views | | 6 replies (last ) | Reply
Post ID: @OP+Z30usdU

6 replies (most recent on top)

Link to full article from which the OP excerpted his/her post:

https://seekingalpha.com/article/4263657-masters-cloud-part-2-evolving-landscape

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @umq+Z30usdU

I believe the article was a seeking alpha article. It’s High Watermark Investment. It looks to be a venture capitalist firm out of Bermuda

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @xfb+Z30usdU

In my experience as a contractor on large cloud projects IBM is not often the second vendor choice for multi-cloud, Google has that spot locked up pretty well. Maybe Google thought seriously about buying Red Hat? IBM got notice and had a bit of panic. That might explain a 34+ billion spend for a company that has profit margins in the hundred million range.

One thing can be counted on though. With a 30+ billion involved. Accounting that doesn't make sense to pay for it. Most industry pundits scratching their heads. A lot will be spent on proper spin and marketing. Making investors believe that the same group that decided how to lose market share 30+ quarters is the best group to spend their 30+ billion.

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @elg+Z30usdU

Google Highwater Investments and no company with this name or website comes up. My bet is this article is IBM written and sponsored trying to change the narrative on RH acquisition given all the negative press and pending credit rating downgrade. This is their typical DNA.

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @ilp+Z30usdU

Who is "Highwater Investments"? An IBM marketing company? A subsidiary of Motley Fool?

The last 50 IBM acquisitions have been total failures Why is this one different?

Expecting to attract a sizeable portion of "the $1 trillion hybrid market" will be a challenge for Red Hat given they currently bring in $4 billion - with most of that being Linux Services revenue. In one year Red Hat will bring in $5 billion but... wait for it... it will be less than $1billion in three years. That's how Cognos imploded. SPSS, Vericent, Cloudant and the Weather Company followed suit soon after.

IBM has many smart people. Acquisitions bring in more smart people.Yet no acquired company has survived being swallowed by IBM. The one thing you can count on: IBM Senior Management. They have what it takes to k--l a $4 billion company.

Think about it. Predicting IBM management will fail is as good a bet as you can get nowadays. Shorting IBM in 2 years will be commonplace. Get in line now and avoid the rush!

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @esp+Z30usdU

What imbecile wrote this? Red Hat has nothing whatsoever to do with "Cognitive". "Hybrid cloud" describes an architecture where an internal private cloud infrastructure is augmented with public cloud - it does not simply mean the sum total of ALL infrastructure, on-prem, private cloud, and public cloud regardless of whether or not they're integrated. Changing the reporting segment under which IBM classifies a particular business is nothing more than a change on paper for quarterly financials and doesn't reflect how the business is actually run internally. Neither Amazon nor Microsoft talk about "multi-cloud", that term just screams "also-ran trying to stay relevant in a market where they're no one's first or second choice".

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @sfc+Z30usdU

Post a reply

: