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Microsoft AND Oracle Are Now More Valuable Than IBM

Nov 18, 2014, 23:06 IST

Over the past couple of weeks, IBM has been shooting out good news like an automatic rifle run amok.

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But investors are not yet biting.

The stock still hasn't recovered from IBM's disappointing earnings last month.

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IBM missed expectations. Then CEO Ginny Rometty abandoned a years-long promise to hit $20 earnings per share in 2015, known internally as Roadmap 2015.

Shares are down about 14% since the first of October.

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Investors are waiting to see if all of IBM's new initiatives will get the company to start growing revenues again.

Folks inside Oracle are cheering about this, we understand. Oracle has become a more valuable company than Big Blue.

Oracle's market cap is $182 billion. IBM's is $162 billion.

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And really, Microsoft's valuation compared to both Oracle and Big Blue is even more impressive.

Since Satya Nadella has taken over as CEO, market cap is up by almost $100 billion to almost $404 billion. That makes Microsoft more valuable than Google, with its $368 billion market cap.

Unlike IBM, Microsoft's revenues continue to grow, even as Nadella overhauls the company into one that is "reinventing productivity."

That said, it seems with every passing day IBM CEO Ginni Rometty gives investors reason to hope.

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Just Tuesday, the company lobbed out two more announcements:

This follows the news last week that IBM and graphics chip maker NVIDIA won a $325 million deal to develop the world's fastest supercomputer for the U.S. government, using IBM's new Power computer chips.

And that follows announcements made in the past couple of weeks including a new partnership with Twitter, a new partnership with huge Chinese internet provider Tencent, an expanded partnership with SAP, among others.

But until this results in growth, competitors Oracle and Microsoft get to look at the markets and gloat.

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