Bangkok Post

Microsoft’s revenue gets lift from cloud

- STEPHEN NELLIS

Microsoft Corp on Wednesday reported quarterly sales and profit that beat Wall Street expectatio­ns, driven by the first accelerati­on of Azure cloud computing revenue growth in eight quarters amid a pitched battle with Amazon. com Inc’s cloud unit.

The results reflected the approach of chief executive officer Satya Nadella, who for five years has re-centred Microsoft around the cloud, renting out its computing power and technology to large businesses.

Microsoft said Azure grew 62% in the fiscal second quarter ended Dec 31, down from a 76% revenue growth rate the year before but up from 59% in the fiscal first quarter.

Microsoft’s chief financial officer, Amy Hood, said increased consumptio­n of Azure services, which include offerings such as computing power to run applicatio­ns and data storage services, drove the revenue growth.

“We did have good usage, which matters a ton to that number,” she told Reuters. “The core thing that we focused on — which is consumptio­n growth — was quite good.”

Microsoft said revenue for its “commercial cloud” — a combinatio­n of Azure and the cloud-based versions of software such as Office — reached $12.5 billion, up from $9 billion the year before.

The commercial cloud gross profit margin — a key measure of cloud profitabil­ity that Microsoft has told investors it expects to improve — was 67%, versus 62% the year before.

Hood said the company was working to improve margins on its core Azure services, which rely on data centres that can cost billions of dollars to build. She cited “hardware improvemen­ts and taking advantage of those hardware improvemen­ts.”

Microsoft’s revenue and profit for the second quarter were $36.9 billion and $1.51 per share, respective­ly, compared with analyst estimates of $35.7 billion and $1.32 per share, according to IBES data from Refinitiv.

Microsoft has focused on hybrid cloud computing — in which a business can use a mix of Microsoft’s data centres and its own — as well as on delivering its longstandi­ng productivi­ty programs such as Office via the cloud.

The shift to the cloud has driven Microsoft’s shares up more than 50% in the past year, as it gains ground against market leader Amazon and also parries the threats to its classic software programs from newer entrants like Alphabet Inc’s Google.

In 2019, Microsoft had 22% share of the cloud computing infrastruc­ture market, compared with 45% at Amazon and 5% from Google, according to data from Forrester Research.

The company’s Intelligen­t Cloud unit, which includes Azure, reported revenue that rose 27% to $11.9 billion in the quarter, versus expectatio­ns of $11.4 billion.

Its Productivi­ty and Business Process unit, which contains the LinkedIn social network, reported $11.8 billion in revenue compared with estimates of $11.4 billion.

Revenue in the unit that contains Windows was $13.2 billion, compared with estimates of $12.8 billion. Over the past year, Windows sales were hampered by shortages of PC chips from Intel Corp, but the chipmaker said last week it had alleviated most of those supply concerns.

For the fiscal third quarter ending in March, Microsoft forecast revenue with a midpoint of $11.9 billion for the unit, compared with analyst expectatio­ns of $11.4 billion.

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