Bangkok Post

Microsoft profit rises on shift to cloud

- SALVADOR RODRIGUEZ

M icrosoft

Corp on Thursday reported strong fourth-quarter earnings on the back of its fast-growing cloud computing business, stoking optimism that the once-stagnant company has found a new groove.

The results were the clearest sign yet that the strategy put in place by chief executive officer Satya Nadella when he assumed the top job in 2014 is paying off.

He has shifted the company’s focus away from a dying personal computer software business and reinventin­g it as a provider of cloud computing and subscripti­on-based software.

“Our technology world view of an intelligen­t cloud and an intelligen­t edge is resonating with customers everywhere,” Nadella said on the company’s earnings conference call with investors on Thursday afternoon.

Most notably, revenue from the cloud unit, which includes the flagship Azure platform and server products, rose about 11% to $7.43 billion in the fiscal fourth quarter ended June 30.

Analysts on average had expected cloud revenue of $7.32 billion, according to data and analytics firm FactSet Research Systems Inc.

Revenue from Azure, which competes directly with Amazon.com Inc’s market-leading AWS division, nearly doubled in the quarter.

Highlighti­ng Azure’s growth were notable increases to Microsoft’s long-term unearned revenue, which rose by more than 61% year-over-year.

“The metric is used to indicate longterm commitment­s for services and products,’’ said Kim Forrest, vice president and senior equity analyst at Fort Pitt Capital Group, a portfolio management firm.

In a bid to continue this momentum, Microsoft last week launched Azure Stack, a new service that allows customers to run a local version of the company’s cloud technology.

“This isn’t just a one-quarter wonder,” Forrest said. “Amazon is going to be paying attention to this.”

“The Azure is smaller than Amazon’s service but that it is growing faster,’’ Michael Turits, analyst at Raymond James & Associates, noted.

“I think it is appealing well to existing enterprise customers who might not immediatel­y be drawn to the Amazon platform,” he said.

Beyond cloud, Microsoft’s various businesses mostly performed well.

The commercial offering of Office 365 was up 43% while Dynamics 365, Microsoft’s customer relationsh­ip management and enterprise resource planning service, saw a year-over-year increase of 74%.

Revenue dropped 2% in the personal computer division, which includes Windows 10 and Microsoft’s line of Surface hardware.

The company said it recorded $306 million in restructur­ing charges following a reorganiza­tion of its sales and marketing teams that was announced earlier this month.

The restructur­ing resulted in lay-offs for thousands of Microsoft employees.

“I don’t think the lay-offs are a worry at all,” said Jan Dawson, chief analyst at Jackdaw Research. “They’re just part of the ongoing transition Microsoft is going through as cloud grows and its legacy business shrinks.”

Microsoft’s net income more than doubled to $6.51 billion or 83 cents per share in the quarter, from $3.12 billion or 39 cents per share in the year-earlier period.

Excluding one-time items, Microsoft earned 98 cents per share.

On an adjusted basis, revenue rose 9.1% to $24.7 billion.

Analysts on average had expected an adjusted profit of 71 cents per share and revenue of $24.27 billion, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.

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