The firm said it earned $89m, or 15 cents per share, on revenue of $850m for its fiscal fourth quarter, which ended 31 March. That compares to a loss of 105m, or 18 cents per share, on revenue of $775, for the same quarter a year ago. Included in the most recent quarter's results were earnings of 10 cents per share from operations the company has discontinued.
As part of the quarter's results, the company said it took a $10m charge related to two federal probes of the company.
"This charge is based on an initial offer the company made to the government in connection with recent settlement discussions associated with the previously disclosed Department of Justice and SEC investigation," the company said, but noted that it can't predict "the timing or outcome of the government investigation or the amount of any fine or penalty, which may be significant, that may be imposed."
Excluding certain items, Computer Associates said it earned 18 cents per share, in line with a 6 May statement that the company would report earnings of 17 cents or 18 cents per share, excluding items.
In a statement, interim chief executive Kenneth Cron said the company is making progress in its software business. "Despite a number of distractions during the quarter, our employees have remained focused on providing the broadest and most innovative software suite in the industry to meet customers' demand for infrastructure, security and storage management capabilities," Cron said in the statement.
Cron laid out his vision for the company at a key customer event last week.
The company said it expects earnings around 5 cents to 7 cents per share, on revenue of between $865m and $885m, for the current quarter, ending 30 June. For the full fiscal year, Computer Associates forecast earnings from 28 cents to 33 cents per share, with revenue between $3.5bn and $3.7bn.
The company noted that its balance of cash and marketable securities ended the quarter at about $1.9bn, up $550m from the December quarter.





