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Microsoft beats on earnings and revenue, delivers upbeat forecast for fiscal third quarter

Microsoft reported better-than-expected earnings and revenue for the fiscal second quarter. The stock initially dropped in extended trading but turned positive after the company issued a sales forecast that also exceeded estimates.

Here’s how the company did:

Revenue increased by 20% from a year earlier, according to a statement, compared with almost 22% growth in the previous quarter. Microsoft’s net income swelled by 21% to $18.77 billion.

The company had $36.77 billion in unearned revenue at the end of the year, below the StreetAccount consensus of $36.90 billion. Microsoft said it expects to recognize 45% of its $152 billion in remaining performance obligations over the next year, the first time that percentage has slipped below 50% since at least 2017.

Amy Hood, Microsoft’s finance chief, eased investor concerns on the earnings call, indicating that demand remains strong across much of the business.

Hood said the company expects revenue of $48.5 billion to 49.3 billion in the fiscal third quarter, topping the $48.23 billion Refinitiv consensus. Hood said the company now expects full-year operating margins to widen slightly.

As of the close on Tuesday, the stock is down 14% since the start of 2022, and is on pace for its worst month since 2010. The slump has come alongside a broad selloff in technology stocks as investors brace for rising interest rates.

“We’d be buyers here,” said Christopher Ouimet, a portfolio manager at Logan Capital Management, which owns about $60 million in Microsoft stock. “We think there’s a lot of noise in the marketplace right now. Most of the high-growth stocks are getting washed out here.”

Ouimet said the rise in the yield for the 10-year Treasury note has little to do with whether Microsoft is “going to be able to sell Azure contracts.”

Microsoft’s Intelligent Cloud segment, which contains the Azure public cloud, GitHub and server products such as Windows Server, generated $18.33 billion in revenue. That equals 25.5% growth, and is a bit higher than the $18.3 billion consensus among analysts surveyed by StreetAccount.

Revenue from Azure and other cloud services grew 46%, ending a streak of four quarters at or above the 50% mark. The expectation was 46%, according to a CNBC survey of 15 analysts, while analysts polled by StreetAccount had been looking for 45.3% Azure growth.

Microsoft doesn’t disclose Azure revenue in dollars. Hood said there will be a sequential growth acceleration in constant currency in the current quarter for Azure.

Revenue from the More Personal Computing segment, which includes Windows, advertising, devices and gaming, totaled $17.47 billion. That’s up 15.5% and above the StreetAccount consensus of $16.56 billion.

Microsoft said sales of Windows licenses increased by 25% in the fourth quarter of 2021. Technology industry research firm Gartner estimated that PC shipments had fallen 5%.

Xbox hardware revenue rose 4% with the passing of the one-year anniversary of Microsoft’s launch of the Xbox Series X and Series S consoles. In the previous quarter, Xbox hardware revenue surged166%.

The gaming component of Microsoft, which now represents almost 11% of total revenue, became more relevant to investors this month, when the company announced plans to acquire Activision Blizzard, the publisher of Call of Duty, for $68.7 billion, the largest deal in Microsoft’s 46-year history.

The Productivity and Business Processes segment that includes Office, Dynamics and LinkedIn posted $15.94 billion in revenue, amounting to 19% growth. Analysts polled by StreetAccount had expected $15.86 billion. The Teams communication app that comes with Office productivity software subscriptions now has over 270 million monthly active users, said Satya Nadella, Microsoft’s CEO.

Nadella said the company generated $15 billion in security revenue in 2021, up nearly 45% from the prior year. In 2020, security revenue increased more than 40%.

During the quarter, Microsoft released Windows 11 as the successor to Windows 10 and introduced the $249 Surface Laptop SE for school use that runs a special version of Windows 11.

“There are now more than 1.4 billion monthly active devices running Windows 10 or Windows 11,” Nadella said. That compares with over 1.3 billion active Windows 10 devices as of April 2021.

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