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Shares of HP (NYSE: HPQ) jumped on Feb. 23, after the PC and printer maker posted first-quarter earnings that topped analyst estimates. Revenue grew 14% annually to $14.5 billion, beating expectations by $1 billion and marking its strongest quarterly growth since it split with Hewlett-Packard Enterprise in late 2015. Non-GAAP earnings rose 26% to $0.48 per share, topping expectations by $0.06 and representing its highest quarterly profit in six quarters.
Those headline numbers were solid, but there were four other reasons to love HP's report.
Image source: Getty Images.
Growth in the PC business
During the quarter, HP's personal systems revenue rose 15% annually to $9.4 billion, marking its fifth straight quarter of double-digit growth. That was impressive, considering the unit faced a tough comparison to its 10% annual growth in the prior-year quarter.
Sales of commercial and consumer PCs rose 16% and 13%, respectively. Total shipments grew 7%, with notebook shipments rising 8% and desktop shipments climbing 6%.
HP's Spectre x2. Image source: HP.
HP finished the quarter with a 23.5% share of the global market, a 1.7 percentage-point jump from a year earlier and good enough to secure its position as the world's the top PC vendor.
HP was also one of three companies -- the other two being Dell and Apple -- that achieved positive growth during the quarter. The other three leading vendors -- Lenovo, Asus, and Acer -- posted flat to negative growth.
CEO Dion Weisler attributed that growth to "amazing design, innovation, and a consistent focus on leveraging customer insights to create and deliver experiences that amaze."
Indeed, HP won 77 awards for innovation at the Consumer Electronics Show in January, and it continues to launch notable new devices -- including a new 15-inch Spectre x360 convertible PC, the HP Pavilion Wave compact desktop with the Alexa digital assistant built in, the enterprise-oriented EliteBook 800 notebook series, and Omen gaming PCs.
Growth in the printing business
HP's Printing revenue rose 14% annually to $5.1 billion, as its total hardware shipments climbed 14%. Commercial hardware shipments surged 73%, consumer hardware shipments rose 7%, and supplies revenue advanced 10%.
The big jump in commercial revenue came from HP's acquisition of Samsung's (NASDAQOTH: SSNLF) printing unit, which closed on Nov. 1. That acquisition significantly boosts HP's market share in A3 printers and scales up its A4 printer business.
Image source: Getty Images.
The printing business also posted year-over-year growth in graphics and managed print services revenues. The graphics business benefited from strong demand for its Indigo and PageWide presses, while its managed print business benefited from a market shift toward contractual printing services.