IBM: With A 5% Dividend Yield Should Big Blue Be In Your Income Portfolio?

 | Sep 08, 2021 11:51

International Business Machines (NYSE:IBM) is not the kind of technology stock that catches investors’ attention. Unlike other blue-chip stocks, this 109-year-old company is struggling to revive growth and compete in an environment where it has been left far behind. 

For context, IBM has a market capitalization of about $125 billion. That is a fraction of Apple's (NASDAQ:AAPL) $2.57 trillion, Microsoft's (NASDAQ:MSFT) $2.24 trillion and Amazon's (NASDAQ:AMZN) more than $1.7 trillion. 

The major reason for this underperformance is that the past decade was a lost one for the software and services giant as it remained irrelevant in the fast-changing technology world, failing to innovate and losing ground to new entrants.

During Virginia Rometty’s eight years at the helm, IBM proved to be dead money for investors. This was the decade when Amazon, Microsoft and Alphabet (NASDAQ:GOOGL) all rallied as demand soared for computing power and applications.

But since her departure last year, there are signs that Big Blue, as it's sometimes referred to colloquially, is gaining lost ground. IBM's new management structure has brightened prospects for the company’s long-term growth after many years of declining sales.

The New York-based company in July posted its biggest quarterly increase in revenue in three years, boosted by strong cloud-computing demand. These numbers helped push IBM stock 10% higher this year. It closed Tuesday at $138.06

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