Posted by: Peter Burrows on April 23
A day after Apple seems to shrug off the world economic woes, Microsoft showed that it’s very much being affected. While analysts expected revenues of $14.1 billion for the quarter ended March 30, Microsoft delivered just $13.65 billion—a 6% decline from the year before. Earnings per share were $.33, well below the $.39 Wall Street was looking for. Net income, which included $710 million in onetime charges, fell by nearly a third, to $3 billion.
Taken together, the quarterly numbers reflect the scary trends facing the company. Sales of its Windows PC software fell 16%—not just because of falling unit sales, but increased sales of cheaper versions that run on low-cost “netbooks.” But the server and tools business, which sells back-office gear that increasingly resides out on the Internet in data centers, rose from $3.2 billion to $3.4 billion. It’s clear that at a time when customers are watching their pennies, they’re investing less in PCs that formed the basis of the company’s lucrative monopolies—and spending more on geat that’s used in “the cloud”, where the company faces competition from the likes of IBM, Google and now Oracle, should its proposed acquisition of Sun Microsystems go through. One wild-card: Will Microsoft be able to adapt its other goldmine business, Microsoft Office and related business applicaitons, for this cloud-based market. So far so good. This unit, which has been rolling out on-line versions of products such as Microsoft Exchange, held up surprisingly well in the quarter, posting growth from $3.2 billion to $3.5 billion.
Maybe the most striking news is Microsoft’s crisp cost-cutting. Who knew this Midas of the computer industry knew how to scale back so well? In the quarter, administrative costs fell by more than $1 billion, from $2.3 billion to $913 million. And the company completed its first ever general layoff, of 5,000 people. The company did not cut into its R&D budget, however. Spending there rose from $2 billion to $2.2 billion.
Please no!!! Don't tell me Bill won't be able to add a new room onto his house?? He has at LEAST 6 bathrooms that need remodeling.... And who's going to pay to cut the grass?
I think Microsoft is doing well considering the overall environment - the first general set of layoffs of all time happened just now - but they'll bounce back. At least they preserved their R&D budget..
You are right that Apple seems to be recession proof with its popular consumer products, but the unexpected competition story comes from Oracle. A post merger Oracle not only will have a stronger database customer base, but also an OS, Office suite, JAVA and (to make cloud computing more relevant) servers. It is easy to predict that Microsoft is keeping a close eye.
Some time ago I suggested shorting them. Corporations are flat refusing to buy upgrades. I work sometimes at a global company that is on Office 2003.
BusinessWeek writers Peter Burrows, Cliff Edwards, Steve Hamm, Rob Hof, Olga Kharif, Steve Wildstrom, Aaron Ricadela, Douglas MacMillan, and Spencer Ante dig behind the headlines to analyze what’s really happening throughout the world of technology. One of the first mainstream media tech blogs, Tech Beat covers everything from tech bellwethers like Apple, Google, and Intel and emerging new leaders such as Facebook to new technologies, trends, and controversies.