miércoles, 12 de febrero de 2014

Microsoft's Q4 Earnings Miss With $19.9B In Revenue, EPS Of $0.59, Takes $900M Charge Against Surface RT Inventory Adjustments

Microsoft just posted its earnings for its fourth financial quarter of 2013. The company reported revenue of $19.9 billion and earnings per share of $0.59. While that's in line with analyst expectations, it's worth pointing out that most analysts had revised their estimates downward over the last three months.

The Wall Street consensus was that Microsoft would report $20.74 billion in revenue and earnings per share of $0.75.

The surprise in this release is that Microsoft says it's taking a $900 million charge "related to Surface RT inventory adjustments." That's quite a blow for Microsoft, which put a lot of resources into this project, which launched to middling reviews and failed to catch on with customers.

msft-q413

In the year-ago quarter, Microsoft reported $18.06 billion in revenue and a loss per share of $0.06 — the first quarterly loss per share in the company's history — because of a massive writedown after its failed aQuantive acquisition.

"While our fourth quarter results were impacted by the decline in the PC market, we continue to see strong demand for our enterprise and cloud offerings, resulting in a record unearned revenue balance this quarter. We also saw increasing consumer demand for services like Office 365, Outlook.com, Skype, and Xbox LIVE," said Amy Hood, chief financial officer at Microsoft. "While we have work ahead of us, we are making the focused investments needed to deliver on long-term growth opportunities like cloud services."

One factor that has been hurting Microsoft — as well as chip giant Intel and others in the PC business — is the general downturn in the PC market and the relatively lackluster reception of Windows 8. As research firm Gartner reported, global PC shipments dropped 11 percent in the last quarter, and while Microsoft has enough other business units to still make a massive profit, this drop definitely weighed on its Windows division. One factor that softens this blow, though, is the fact that many businesses are finally upgrading their old XP machines to Windows 7.

One area many pundits continue to look at is Microsoft's Online Services Division, which reported an $8.1 billion loss in the year-ago-quarter. Since then, though, this division slowly reduced its losses, and last quarter, it was "only" $262 million in the red. This time around, the Online Services division reported a revenue increase of 9% but still posted a loss of $372 million.

msft-q413-onlineservices

For its fiscal year 2013, the company's revenue, operating income, and diluted earnings per share were $77.85 billion, $26.76 billion, and $2.58 per share.

Here are the earnings for Microsoft's main business units:

  • Windows Division: 1.09 billion profit on $4.411 billion in revenue
  • Servers and Tools: $2.33 billion profit on $5.502 billion in revenue
  • Online Services: $372 million loss on $800 million in revenue
  • Business Division: $4.87 billion profit on $7.231 billion in revenue
  • Entertainment and Devices: $110 million loss on $1.915 billion in revenue

Earlier this month, Microsoft announced a major reorganization of its business units under the "one strategy, one Microsoft" banner. The company is now organized by function (engineering, marketing, business development and evangelism, advanced strategy and research, finance, HR, legal and COO). This reorganization obviously didn't have any influence on this quarter's results yet, but given that Microsoft is doing this to become more nimble, the company itself surely expects to see some results within the coming quarters.


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