Microsoft beats forecasts on high demand for cloud products

Total revenue fell 10.1 per cent to $23.80 billion, squeezed by a strong dollar

Microsoft chief executive Satya Nadella has focused on cloud services and mobile applications on slower growth in its traditional software business.

Microsoft reported quarterly revenue and profit that beat analysts' expectations, driven by aggressive cost cutting and growing demand for its cloud products and services.

Microsoft chief executive Satya Nadella has focused on cloud services and mobile applications on slower growth in its traditional software business. Companies moving much of their information technology off premises, part of the cloud-computing trend, proved a bright spot.

“The enterprise cloud opportunity is massive, larger than any market we have ever participated in,” Mr Nadella said in a conference call.

Washinton-based Microsoft’s stock had climbed more than 26 per cent in the past 12 months to $52.06 at Thursday’s close, even as the broader market has dropped 5 per cent. The shares rose 3 percent in after-hours trading.

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Revenue from the “intelligent cloud” business, which includes products such as its Azure cloud infrastructure and services business along with other noncloud products such as traditional servers, rose 5 per cent to $6.3 billion.

Perhaps a better indicator of its cloud strength is what the company calls its combined cloud business, on track for $9.4 billion in annual revenue, the company said. That measure, which includes Azure plus other businesses like Office 365, is up 15 per cent from the $8.2 billion revenue it estimated last quarter.

“They nailed the cloud,” said Matt Howard, a venture capitalist at Norwest Ventures who monitors Microsoft closely.

Total revenue, however, fell 10.1 per cent to $23.80 billion, squeezed by a strong dollar as well as a weak personal computer market that has reduced demand for Microsoft’s Windows operating system. On an adjusted basis, revenue fell to $25.69 billion but beat analysts’ estimates.

Microsoft generates more than half of its revenue from outside the United States.

Revenue in the business that includes Windows fell 5 per cent to $12.66 billion. Windows revenue closely tracks sales of personal computers, which fell 10.6 per cent globally in the December quarter from a year earlier, according to research firm IDC.

IDC said business should improve later this year as companies that had delayed replacing machines before upgrading to Windows 10 make the switch. Microsoft released Windows 10 in July.

Microsoft’s net income fell to $5 billion, or 62 cents per share, in its second-quarter ended December 31 from $5.86 billion, or 71 cents per share, a year earlier.

Reuters