USA TODAY US Edition

Microsoft $12.5B richer in 1 day

Shares soar on talk of Office for iPads

- Matt Krantz @mattkrantz USA TODAY

Microsoft hit its highest level since 2000 Tuesday and was one of the top five performing stocks in the Standard & Poor’s 500 on increasing chatter a version of Office is coming for Apple’s iPad.

Shares of Microsoft gained $1.50, or 3.9%, to $39.55 in the stock’s biggest one-day move in seven months. The stock is up nearly 6% this year, outpacing the broader market. Tuesday’s rally alone lifted Microsoft’s market value $12.5 billion to $328.3 billion.

Office is the dominant software and cloud service used by businesses and profession­als to create documents, calculate spreadshee­ts and design presentati­ons. By taking the service to Apple’s iPad computers, Microsoft would demonstrat­e its seriousnes­s in using its edge in cloud-based services to bring services to all devices to boost revenue.

There’s been no formal announceme­nt about Office for the iPad from Microsoft, but technology watchers increasing­ly expect it to be one of the first bold moves announced by Microsoft’s new CEO, Satya Nadella. Nadella may announce Office for iPad at a Microsoft press event on March 27 in San Francisco, reports CNET.

Microsoft continues to show that while it may be behind competitor­s selling mobile hardware, it’s ahead of others in the fastgrowin­g cloud computing industry increasing­ly seen as the next frontier in computing. Microsoft’s Azure cloud computing platform continues to grow as de- velopers see it as a low-cost way to build applicatio­ns for consumers and businesses.

It’s unclear how the Office suite will be delivered, but some expect it to be part of a subscripti­on to Office 365. Office 365 is Microsoft’s successful softwareas-a-service business where companies and consumers essentiall­y rent the ability to have the latest version of Office, as opposed to buying package software.

Microsoft has been aggressive in making its software available not just on its own platforms, like Windows 8 and Windows Phone 8, but on any device. This week, Microsoft made its note-taking software, OneNote, available on additional Apple devices for free. Unlike other technology companies that try to lock consumers into a platform, Microsoft’s approach allows it to make money on other tech firms’ platforms.

Despite the positive trends at Microsoft, analysts are still slow to understand it, according to a note from Jason Trennert of Strategas Research Partners. The percentage of analysts who rate the stock a buy is at the lowest level in 15 years, Strategas says.

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