By Benjamin Pimentel, MarketWatch

SAN FRANCISCO (MarketWatch) -- Oracle shares slipped Wednesday a day after the software behemoth posted disappointing results, but shares of Hewlett-Packard rallied as the company geared up for its annual shareholder meeting.

Oracle (ORCL) was down 0.8% to close at $38.55 after the Redwood City, Calif.-based tech giant reported weaker-than-expected earnings, although some analysts also pointed to signs of improvement in the company's business.

"We continue to believe that while Oracle is seeing secular pressure in its applications business, concerns about its most important, and most profitable, business, infrastructure software, are overblown," J.P. Morgan analyst John DiFucci told clients in a note.

Wedbush analyst Steve Koenig cited Oracle's better-than-expected results in its hardware business, telling clients in a note, "This turnaround looks as if it should be sustainable, at least for the current product cycle."

But Koenig also pointed to competitive pressures, mainly from companies offering Web-based software applications, also known as software-as-a-service, such as Salesforce.com and Workday Inc. on both Oracle and another major enterprise software company, SAP.

"Although management asserts that the adoption of cloud computing positions Oracle to switch spots with applications leader SAP (SAP), we think the reality on the ground is that software-as-a-service vendors such as Salesforce (CRM) and Workday (WDAY) are gaining share against both vendors," Koenig wrote.

H-P (HPQ) was up 3.5% to close at $31.62 as the company prepared to meet with shareholders Wednesday afternoon. The company's dispute with Autonomy Corp. founder Mike Lynch also came into focus again after Lynch put out an open letter accusing H-P of misleading its shareholders.

H-P had acquired the British software company in what has turned into a controversial 2011 transaction.

H-P had said it found numerous accounting irregularities at Autonomy before the merger. In an open letter to H-P shareholders, Lynch said "H-P fully understood Autonomy's accounting methods from when they took over the company." Lynch said, "The evidence shows that H-P is not just smearing us, but also misleading you, its shareholders."

Reacting to Lynch's letter, H-P reaffirmed its allegations related to the Autonomy deal. "H-P reported those irregularities to appropriate civil and criminal regulators in the U.S. and U.K.," the company statement said. "H-P continues to cooperate in ongoing investigations by those regulators."

The Nasdaq Composite Index (RIXF) was down 26 points, or 0.6%, to close at 4,308. The Morgan Stanley High Tech 35 Index (MSH) and the Philadelphia Semiconductor Index(SOX) were each down a fraction.

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