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Hewlett-Packard moves up profit report after memo leak

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Tech giant Hewlett-Packard Co. said late Monday it would move up its fiscal-second-quarter earnings report to Tuesday from Wednesday.

The Palo Alto company didn’t give a reason, but it’s likely a reaction to Bloomberg News’ leak of a memo that H-P Chief Executive Leo Apotheker sent to senior executives earlier this month.

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The memo, reported after the stock market closed on Monday, warned of “another tough quarter” in the three months that will end in July and ordered H-P executives to “watch every penny and minimize all hiring.”

The fiscal-second-quarter report is for the period ending April 30. Analysts expect the company to report profit of about $1.21 a share in the quarter.

The earnings report will be released at 4:30 a.m. PDT on Tuesday instead of on Wednesday, H-P said in a statement. The company will hold a conference call beginning at 5:30 a.m. PDT.

H-P stock plunged 9.6% on Feb. 23 after the company warned that sales and earnings in the April 30 period would be less than expected. Analysts had been forecasting that the company would earn $1.26 a share.

The company blamed weakness in PC sales to consumers, though it said sales to businesses were strong. Under Apotheker, who took over as CEO in November, H-P has pledged to boost its software and server businesses to reduce reliance on PC sales.

H-P shares tumbled 4.8% in after-hours trading Monday, down $1.91 to $37.89, after falling 61 cents to $39.80 in regular trading.

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Not counting after-hours trading, the stock was down 5.5% year to date compared with a 3.2% gain for the average tech stock in the Standard & Poor’s 500 index.

-- Tom Petruno

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