Microsoft Sales, Profit Jump as Cloud-Fueled Growth Persists

Profit and sales for the period ended Sept. 30 exceeded analysts’ estimates, with revenue from Azure cloud-computing services jumping 76 percent. Office 365, the internet-based versions of the company’s productivity applications, saw sales to corporations climb 36 percent.

Bloomberg

October 25, 2018

4 Min Read
Microsoft's cloud sales across product lines, 2018

(Bloomberg) -- Microsoft Corp. posted another quarter of brisk revenue growth driven by cloud services, underscoring the company’s success in shifting its business toward internet-based computing. The stock rose in extended trading.

Profit and sales for the period ended Sept. 30 exceeded analysts’ estimates, with revenue from Azure cloud-computing services jumping 76 percent. Office 365, the internet-based versions of the company’s productivity applications, saw sales to corporations climb 36 percent.

Chief Executive Officer Satya Nadella has been working to transform the company into a seller of services that let businesses store data and run applications from Microsoft’s data centers, instead of their own in-house machines. Amazon.com Inc. is the market leader, but booming demand means Microsoft has still been able to carve out a solid business with its Azure cloud services. Redmond, Washington-based Microsoft dominates in the fast-growing market for cloud-based office software, and corporate upgrades to Windows operating systems are keeping that product’s sales growing even as PC sales remain flat.

"What is there that’s not doing well at Microsoft?" said Mark Moerdler, an analyst at Sanford C. Bernstein & Co.

Profit in the fiscal first quarter rose to $8.82 billion, or $1.14 a share, topping the 96-cent average estimate of analysts polled by Bloomberg. Sales climbed 19 percent to $29.1 billion, Microsoft said Wednesday in a statement, higher than predictions for $27.9 billion.

Microsoft’s shares rose about 4.5 percent in extended trading after the report. They had declined 5.4 percent to $102.32 in regular New York trading amid a late-day stock-market rout. The company’s stock has gained about 20 percent so far this year, but the shares have slipped in recent weeks in line with a broader equity market selloff.

Commercial cloud sales rose 47 percent to $8.5 billion in the quarter, while margins for that business widened by 4 percentage points to 62 percent, the company said in slides on its website. Microsoft has improved profitability in the division as it adds customers, letting it run services more efficiently and spread costs across more clients. With cloud demand rising, Microsoft has also said it will continue to invest in new products and data centers.

The company is also close to finalizing the acquisition of code-sharing website GitHub Inc. for $7.5 billion in stock, a deal aimed at accelerating moves into the cloud and artificial intelligence.

Microsoft has been upgrading its cloud software, and has also revamped its sales force to do a better job getting customers to buy. In July 2017, Microsoft laid off thousands of sales workers and starting hiring for different kinds of roles, including some experts in particular industries and product needs. The changes have paid off, Piper Jaffray & Co. analyst Alex Zukin wrote in a recent note to clients.

"Customers even suggest that sales talent has been leveled up," he wrote, noting that the overhauled sales force is better at selling a group of products that work together, rather than individual programs. In the last few days of the quarter, Microsoft announced a deal with Volkswagen AG to underpin that company’s efforts in connected cars and cloud services.

The hope among Microsoft investors is that Azure keeps growing and drives sales in other parts of the business as well, as customers invest in new applications running in Microsoft’s cloud, Moerdler said. "I’m feeling more and more confident that they’ve got their act together," he said. "What they’ve accomplished in the past four to five years is much harder than what they have to accomplish in next five years."

Windows commercial product sales climbed 12 percent in the period, sending revenue in the More Personal Computing division up 15 percent to $10.7 billion. Though it’s staking its future on the cloud, Microsoft still sells billions of dollars of Windows software, particularly for corporate desktop computers. Global PC shipments were little changed in the three months ended in September, according to market research firm Gartner Inc. Though overall growth was minuscule, corporate demand was steady, and the market has shown "modest stability for two consecutive quarters," Gartner said earlier this month.

Sales in Microsoft’s Xbox and video-game business rose 44 percent. That unit has been expanding quickly for the past few quarters, fueled by what Microsoft executives like to call "third-party" software, mostly meaning players flocking to titles created by other game makers -- especially "Fortnite" -- but played on Xbox. Revenue from Microsoft’s Surface hardware gained 14 percent.

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