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IBM's first quarter profits jumps 21%

IBM said last night that its first quarter profit rose 21% after the technology giant cut costs and sold its struggling personal computer business to a Chinese rival.

The firm has an Irish workforce of about 3,700.

IBM said net income for the period ended March 31 climbed to $1.708 billion, or $1.08 a share. This year's results included the cost of stock option expenses, while last year's did not.

Revenue slipped to $20.7 billion from $22.9 billion last  year, when IBM's revenue included sales from its now-divested PC unit. Not including that business, which IBM sold to Lenovo Group, Big Blue's revenue would have been flat from a year ago, excluding  the impact of currency exchange rates.

The sales figure was in line with Wall Street expectations, while IBM topped the earnings estimates of analysts surveyed by Wall  Street analysts, who forecast a profit of $1.04 a share.

The company's gross profit margin rose to 39.1% from 36% a year ago, thanks mainly to the PC unit spinoff. It also cut sales and marketing expenses by 7%.

'IBM had a good quarter with excellent earnings-per-share  results,' said Samuel Palmisano, IBM chairman and CEO. 'We continued to improve our profit performance with our strategic focus on higher-value segments of the marketplace, as well  as with our emphasis on productivity and global integration. Our performance underscores the strength of our business model across a balanced portfolio of software, services and hardware, and demonstrates the benefits of the strategic actions we've taken in  recent years to reposition the company.'

Global services remained IBM's largest business, with revenue of $11.6 billion, down 1% from a year ago. The division also reported new bookings of $11.4 billion. Hardware sales fell 32% to $4.6 billion, but  excluding the divested PC business, they rose 3%, the  company said. Software sales rose 2% to $3.9 billion dollars. The company did not give a second-quarter forecast.