Microsoft Results to Give View on Enterprise, Cloud Spending

Microsoft’s earnings report, after market close Wednesday, comes amid signals that cloud-services providers are cutting infrastructure spending, raising questions about whether the move is a response to rising inventories or weakening demand.

Bloomberg

January 30, 2019

2 Min Read
Microsoft has outperformed other large-cap stocks

(Bloomberg) -- For the past few months, Microsoft Corp.’s stock has performed better than its tech-giant peers as investors bet its enterprise and cloud-focusing business offered a safe port amid weakening spending in the sector. Now it’s time to test that thesis.

Microsoft’s earnings report, after market close Wednesday, comes amid signals that cloud-services providers are cutting infrastructure spending, raising questions about whether the move is a response to rising inventories or weakening demand.

Commentary from chipmakers Intel Corp. and Nvidia Corp. “raises the question of whether this is due to hyperscale vendors having sufficiently built out last year to sustain expected growth (which would be a good thing for Microsoft), or whether there could be unanticipated slowing in cloud demand,” Raymond James analyst Michael Turits wrote. Networking gear vendor Juniper Networks Inc. also reported weakness from cloud customers.

Microsoft carries added heft this earnings season after surpassing Apple Inc. and Amazon.com Inc. as the world’s most valuable company. The Redmond, Washington-based company has a market value of more than $800 billion and outperformed most other large-cap technology companies over the past four months as investors bet that spending by business customers will hold up better than consumers.

Microsoft rose 1.7 percent at 10:08 a.m. in New York, snapping a two-day skid amid a broad rally in tech stocks. Wall Street is projecting revenue of $32.5 billion in the company’s fiscal second quarter, up 12 percent from the same period a year ago, according to the average of analyst estimates compiled by Bloomberg.

Bank of America Merrill Lynch expects Microsoft’s sales to exceed the estimate driven by strength in the company’s More Personal Computing segment, which includes gaming and advertising, and its cloud business.

Just the numbers

2Q EPS estimate $1.09 (range $1.05 to $1.18) 2Q revenue estimate $32.50 billion (range $32.19 billion to $33.26 billion) Productivity and Business Processes $10.08 billion (4 estimates compiled by Bloomberg News) Intelligent Cloud $9.27 billion More Personal Computing $13.08 billion 3Q revenue estimate $29.85 billion (range $29.13 billion to $30.39 billion) Productivity and Business Processes $10.12 billion (4 estimates) Intelligent Cloud $9.30 billion More Personal Computing $10.44 billion

 

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