Microsoft beats forecasts with record revenue for Q2

January 24, 2008, 08:35 PM —  IDG News Service — 

Microsoft beat Wall Street
expectations for both revenue and earnings per share for its fiscal 2008 second
quarter, attributing its strong quarter to sales of core client products such
as Windows Vista and Office 2007, as well as Exchange and SharePoint server software.

For the quarter ended Dec. 31, Microsoft reported revenue of US$16.37 billion,
an increase of 30 percent year over year and a number that solidly beat the
$15.95 billion that Thomson Financial analysts had estimated. Last year for
the same period Microsoft reported $12.54 billion in revenue.

Diluted earnings per share were $0.50, an increase of 92 percent over the $0.27
per share reported last year, and $0.04 higher than Thomson Financial estimates
of $0.46. Operating income for the quarter was $6.48 billion, an increase of
92 percent from the $3.47 billion reported for the same period last year.

Microsoft's year-over-year percentage growth is higher than normal due to a
deferral of $1.64 billion in revenue and operating income, as well as $0.11
of diluted earnings per share from the second to the third quarter of fiscal
2007. Without the deferrals, second-quarter growth rates for revenue, operating
income and earnings per share would be 15 percent, 27 percent and 32 percent,
respectively, for the quarter reported Thursday.

Analysts had been expecting the company to report a strong quarter even among
economic uncertainty and fears that the U.S. economy is entering a recession.

Microsoft's client business, on sales of Windows Vista, was especially strong
in the quarter, with $4.34 billion in revenue compared to $2.59 billion a year
ago. According to Microsoft, its client business has grown 20 percent on average
since Windows Vista was made available nearly a year ago, and the company believes
Vista began hitting its stride for adoption in the second quarter. According
to Microsoft, it has sold more than 100 million licenses for Vista.

Looking ahead to the next quarter, which ends March 31, Microsoft said it expects
revenue in the range of $14.3 billion to $14.6 billion; operating income in
the range of $5.6 billion to $5.7 billion; and earnings per share in the range
of $0.43 to $0.45.

For the full fiscal year ending June 30, Microsoft expects revenue in the range
of $59.9 billion to $60.5 billion; operating income in the range of $24.2 billion
to $24.4 billion; and earnings per share in the range of $1.85 to $1.88.

On a conference call to discuss the results, Chief Financial Officer Chris
Liddell noted that 60 percent of Microsoft's revenue in the second quarter came
from outside the U.S., and said emerging markets are becoming increasingly important
to the company's revenue. In the past several years, Microsoft has made significant
investments in selling its technology in developing countries such as India,
Brazil and China.

Microsoft's online business, which analysts are watching closely, grew 38 percent
in the quarter to $863 million in revenue, with $154 million of that being attributed
to Microsoft's $6 billion purchase of digital media services firm aQuantive
last year. Online advertising revenue grew 38 percent.

Though the online growth is encouraging for a business that has been flat for
several years, financial analysts on the conference call questioned whether
Microsoft is growing that part of its business fast enough to compete with Google,
which shows no sign of losing its solid lead in online advertising anytime soon.

Liddell defended Microsoft's online business, saying that while it's "not
the size or critical mass we'd like to see," the company's investments
in that segment will begin to pay off in a few years.

"We make decisions on investments now that have multiyear implications.
If you look at our revenue performance over the last couple of quarters, it
didn't happen by accident," it was the result of investments from several
years ago, he said.

Liddell also took time to welcome Stephen Elop to Microsoft. The former Adobe
and Juniper executive will join the company next month to replace longtime executive
Jeff Raikes as head of Microsoft's business division. Raikes is retiring from
Microsoft in September.

Liddell said Raikes had "redefined the role of business productivity software"
at Microsoft. It was Raikes who helped transform Office from a fledgling desktop
productivity product to a full suite for collaboration and business intelligence,
and who built up Microsoft's ERP (enterprise resource planning) and CRM (customer
relationship management) businesses. In fact, Liddell noted that the Microsoft
Business Division that Raikes led currently generates the most revenue at Microsoft.

IDG News Service

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