Lower sales of Veritas storage products, higher-than-expected costs for implementation of new ERP revise expectations for the last quarter downward Weak sales in its enterprise storage group have forced Symantec to warn of lower-than-expected financial results for its most recent quarter.Symantec had been expecting to post earnings of $0.14 or $0.15 per share for its third fiscal quarter, ended Dec. 29, but on Tuesday it warned that they would be in the $0.10 to $0.11 range instead. Revenue for the quarter is expected to be in the $1.29 billion to $1.31 billion range, down from previous estimates of between $1.32 billion to $1.35 billion.In a statement, Symantec Chief Executive Officer John Thompson blamed the shortfall on weak performance in the company’s Data Center Management business, which primarily sells the Veritas enterprise storage products that Symantec acquired in 2005. The Data Center Management group is run by Kris Hagerman, who was previously executive vice president of storage and server management at Veritas.Implementation of a new ERP system during the quarter cost more than expected, which also hit the company’s bottom line, Thompson said.The Cupertino, California, software vendor is not the only technology company to have struggled during the last three months of 2006. Last week, SAP AG and Advanced Micro Devices warned of similarly disappointing results for the period. Symantec also lowered its estimates for its fiscal year ending March 2007, saying that it expected revenue to be in the range of $5.08 billion to $5.11 billion. This is down from its previous estimate of $5.1 billion to $5.3 billion.Symantec’s stock took a beating on the warning, dropping nearly 13 percent by Tuesday afternoon. Just after 2 p.m. Eastern, it was trading at $17.82, down from its previous close of $20.48.Symantec will report its Q3 earnings on Jan. 24. Technology Industry