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22:04 GMT, Wednesday, 18 March 2009

Oracle bucks gloom with dividend

Oracle headquarters

Business software manufacturer Oracle has declared it will pay its first dividend to shareholders after its results beat analysts' forecasts.

It said its quarterly net income fell 1% from a year earlier to $1.3bn (£0.9bn). Software revenues rose 5%.

Oracle said its profits would have grown 11% if the US dollar had not strengthened so much.

A strong dollar means that the company's deals overseas are not worth as much.

Oracle said it would pay a dividend of 5 US cents per share, or 20 cents annually, its first such payment to shareholders since the company went public in March 1986.

"This is a tremendous achievement in the face of the serious slowdown in the world economy," said Oracle boss Larry Ellison.

Shares in Oracle rose 7% in after-hours trading on the news.

Many companies have been cutting or scrapping their dividends to conserve cash to weather the economic downturn.




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Related to this story:
Strong dollar hits Oracle profits (18 Dec 08 |  Business )
SAP admits Oracle data downloads (03 Jul 07 |  Business )
Acquisition spree boosts Oracle (26 Jun 07 |  Business )
Oracle ups pressure on rival SAP (21 Mar 07 |  Business )
Oracle sues rival SAP for 'theft' (22 Mar 07 |  Business )
SAP profits rise 11% on US sales (20 Apr 06 |  Business )
Oracle quarterly profits up 42% (20 Mar 06 |  Business )

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