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Hewlett-Packard plans to break into two

Hewlett-Packard, a pioneer in business computers, plans to break into two parts as it separates its personal-computer and printer businesses from its technology services.
Credit: Justin Sullivan, Getty Images
A sign is posted outside of the Hewlett-Packard headquarters on May 23, 2014 in Palo Alto, California.

(USA TODAY) -- Hewlett-Packard, a pioneer in business computers, plans to break into two parts as it separates its personal-computer and printer businesses from its technology services.

As early as Monday, the tech giant plans to announce the breakup, first reported Sunday by The Wall Street Journal and confirmed by other media and a person familiar with the matter.

CEO Meg Whitman, who has led a multiyear restructuring, would serve as chairman of the PC and printer business and CEO of the separate company, which would be chaired by HP's current lead independent director Patricia Russo, according to several published reports.

An HP breakup, which has been under discussion for more than a year, would follow recent corporate splits as companies aim to satisfy shareholders by sharpening their focus. On Tuesday, online-auction giant eBay said it was spinning off its PayPal payments-processing unit.

"We have no comment," HP spokeswoman Sarah Pompei said Sunday of the latest report. The Journal said the breakup is expected to occur as a tax-free distribution of shares to the company's stockholders next year.

"The major benefit I see in the move is that the enterprise business will have a singular focus on the data center, and the PC and printer business can be a lot speedier and agile," said Patrick Moorhead, president of Moor Insights & Strategy, a tech analyst firm. He said HP will need to ensure its PC and printer business has enough cash to compete in both the consumer PC and emerging smart home markets.

HP, founded 75 years ago in a garage in Palo Alto, Calif., where it's currently based, has been trying to reverse sagging sales as it faces tough competition from Oracle and IBM. In 2012, under Whitman's leadership, it merged its PC business with its more lucrative printer one.

It has also been cutting costs and laying off tens of thousands of employees. And as more computing moves to mobile devices, Whitman has tried to steer HP's business into the growing demand for cloud-computing systems.

In August, HP reported good news: a sales uptick. It said a resurgence in PC shipments helped boost its year-over-year revenue 1% to $27.6 billion. Its Personal Systems group, which includes PCs and notebooks, grew 12% in that time.

Desktops accounted for about 40% revenue of HP revenue as consumers seek out larger computer screens for more more sophisticated tasks they cannot do on tablets.

In the last year, HP also held talks to merge with data-storage giant EMC Corp., but the Journal said those negotiations recently ended because of lack of shareholder support.

Contributing: Jon Swartz

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