Microsoft Shows Strong Growth in Gaming, Cloud -- Update
April 27 2021 - 4:13PM
Dow Jones News
By Aaron Tilley
Microsoft Corp. has extended its pandemic-fueled run of strong
quarterly earnings that have bolstered investor enthusiasm in the
software giant, bringing the company near a $2 trillion
valuation.
Microsoft has seen massive growth across its professional and
consumer businesses with people stuck at home and remote work and
distance education becoming the norm for many. That has driven
rapid uptake of its cloud-computing services and supercharged the
company's videogaming sales. Microsoft's stock is up around 50%
over the past year, driving the company's valuation to about $1.97
trillion, second only to Apple Inc.
"Over a year into the pandemic, digital adoption curves aren't
slowing down. They're accelerating, " Microsoft Chief Executive
Satya Nadella said in a statement.
The Redmond, Wash., company posted a 19% increase in its fiscal
third-quarter sales to about $41.7 billion, generating net income
of $15.5 billion for the January through March period. The results
beat Wall Street expectations, according to FactSet.
Microsoft shares retreated around 3% in after-hours trading
after a strong run-up in the stock ahead of earnings.
"Now there are worries about the sustainability of Microsoft
post-pandemic," said Rishi Jaluria, an analyst for investment
research firm D.A. Davidson & Co.
Strong demand for cloud services late last year helped Microsoft
reverse a trend of a gradually declining pace of growth as the
business gained scale. The company said sales linked to Azure cloud
services advanced 50% in the most recent quarter, on par with the
December quarter. Azure, the collection of a global network of data
centers and software tools Microsoft sells as a service, last year
became a larger revenue source for the company than its Windows
operating system, Piper Sandler analyst Brent Bracelin has said.
Microsoft is No. 2 in the cloud behind Amazon.com Inc.
Microsoft also was able to popularize during the pandemic its
Teams workplace collaboration suite that offers features competing
with companies such as Zoom Video Communications Inc. and Slack
Technologies Inc. Teams usage rose from 20 million active users
before the pandemic in November 2019 to 115 million in October
2020, the last time the company updated its usage figures.
Microsoft has been looking for ways to underpin its efforts to
reach a larger number of users through some high-profile
acquisitions. Earlier this month, it acquired
artificial-intelligence company Nuance Communications Inc. for $16
billion in an effort to boost its access to healthcare customers,
where Nuance has a dominant position in voice-transcription
software for doctors.
The company's videogaming activity has been particularly hot
during the pandemic. Xbox content and services revenue increased
34% in the latest quarter aided by the recent release of two new
consoles, Xbox Series X and S.
Late last year, the company bought ZeniMax Media Inc., the
parent company of the popular Doom videogame franchise, for $7.5
billion. Microsoft also held acquisition talks with chat startup
Discord Inc. that would have bolstered its consumer business. Those
negotiations have ended, The Wall Street Journal reported last
week, with Discord pursuing an initial public offering.
Some of Microsoft's other consumer-focused business also saw
sales advance. Revenue from Surface laptops, which have been
popular with people working and learning from home, rose 12% from a
year ago. The search advertising business was up 17%.
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Write to Aaron Tilley at aaron.tilley@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
April 27, 2021 16:58 ET (20:58 GMT)
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