[ISN] Study: War could crimp IT spending

From: InfoSec News (isnat_private)
Date: Wed Mar 26 2003 - 00:02:28 PST

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    http://news.com.com/1200-1014-994033.html
    
    By Sandeep Junnarkar and Ed Frauenheim 
    Staff Writer, CNET News.com
    March 25, 2003
    
    The war in Iraq is giving chief information officers pause about IT
    spending, according to a survey by investment bank Merrill Lynch.
    
    Although less than one-fifth of the surveyed American and European
    CIOs said they would slow technology spending with the start of the
    U.S.-led war against Iraq, fewer still said they would increase
    spending even if the war were to end quickly, according to the recent
    survey.
    
    Seventeen percent of the CIOs said that the war's start would put a
    drag on their spending. A quick end to the conflict, meanwhile, would
    not provide much incentive to tech buyers--90 percent of those
    surveyed said that such a turn of events would not cause them to
    increase their IT spending.
    
    The survey of 100 CIOs--75 in the United States and 25 in
    Europe--suggests that the roadblocks to tech spending are "structural
    problems in the economy and technology" rather than the instability
    caused by war.
    
    Others have come to the same conclusion. Goldman Sachs, for one, sees
    only a smidgen of growth in the tech sector for the coming year,
    calling attention to "the persistently weak fundamental environment,"  
    whose challenges won't be conquered by a smoothing over of
    geopolitical tensions.
    
    An increasing number of technology companies have blamed the rising
    tensions in the Middle East over the past few months for their
    declining revenue, saying that their customers had curtailed IT
    spending because of uncertainty arising from the possibility of war.  
    Early this month, for example, Oracle said its revenue came in at the
    low end of the company's guidance because of rising oil prices and
    anxiety over the possible war.
    
    "Companies such as EMC and Sun that have less recurring revenue are at
    most risk," said the Merrill Lynch survey, conducted by analyst Steven
    Milunovich.
    
    The survey concludes that even a 20 percent slowdown in tech spending
    could cause technology companies to miss their revenue targets for the
    quarter.
    
    Merrill Lynch's "TechStrat" survey also covered other topics,
    including utility computing, an emerging technology practice intended
    to better coordinate hardware resources and in some cases treat
    computing as if it were a service like electricity or water. Asked
    what year they expected utility computing to become a reality, the
    CIOs on average said 2006. IBM was viewed as the most capable supplier
    of utility computing, followed by Sun Microsystems and
    Hewlett-Packard.
    
    The CIOs surveyed by Milunovich said they were increasing the variable
    portion of their IT costs but were not yet sold on the idea of utility
    computing--the "pay as you go" model for computing power. Fixed costs
    are those associated with facilities, depreciation and salaries, while
    variable costs are those connected to outsourcing and contract
    workers.
    
    
    
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