Microsoft Corp (NASDAQ: MSFT) reported its financial results for the fiscal third quarter on Tuesday that topped analysts’ estimates by a significant margin, despite the ongoing COVID-19 disruptions.
1. Financial performance
Microsoft reported £11.12 billion of earnings in the third quarter that translates to £1.46 per share. The tech giant’s earnings in Q3 were bolstered by a net income-tax benefit worth £445.91 million. In the same quarter last year, Microsoft’s per-share earnings were capped at a lower £1.01.
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The American multinational generated £29.99 billion of revenue in the recent quarter versus the year-ago figure of £23.78 billion. According to FactSet, experts had forecast the company to post £29.52 billion of revenue and £1.28 of earnings per share. Earlier in April, Microsoft bought Nuance Communications for about £8.37 billion.
2. Revenue from individual business segments
Azure sales, Microsoft added on Tuesday, jumped 50% in the third quarter. The segment (Intelligent Cloud) at large, on the other hand, posted £10.86 billion of total revenue, compared to £8.83 billion last year and £10.74 billion expected.
Revenue from productivity and business solutions printed at £9.78 billion, beating both last year’s figure and FactSet consensus for Q3. At £9.35 billion, more personal computing revenue came in better than £7.91 billion in the comparable quarter of the previous year, and £9.03 billion expected.
3. Guidance for the fiscal fourth quarter
For the fiscal fourth quarter, analysts are calling for £30.91 billion of revenue for Microsoft. Their estimate for per-share earnings stands in Q4 stands at £1.28. In comparison, the tech giant forecasts its revenue in the fourth quarter to fall in the range of £31.35 billion to £32 billion.
4. Chief Executive Satya Nadella’s comments
In Tuesday’s announcement, CEO Satya Nadella said:
“Over a year into the pandemic, digital adoption curves aren’t slowing down. They’re accelerating, and it’s just the beginning.â€
In his earnings preview last week, Wedbush Securities managing director Dan Ives wrote:
“In many cases, we are seeing enterprises accelerate their digital transformation (larger deals) and cloud strategy with Microsoft by 6 to 12 months as the prospects of a semi-remote workforce for the foreseeable future looks here to stay, and Redmond hits its next stage of growth in the cloud.â€
Impact on the share price
Microsoft shares were reported more than 3% down in after-hours trading on Tuesday. The stock is now exchanging hands at £182.61 per share versus £156.57 per share at the start of the year.
Commenting on why the stock price might still be under pressure, Jefferies’ Brent Thill said on CNBC’s ‘Closing Bell’:
“It looked great across the board. I think it’s just high expectations going in. They beat the top line but the magnitude of the beat, I think, didn’t meet expectations that were relatively even higher.â€
At the time of writing, Microsoft is valued at £1.42 trillion and has a price to earnings ratio of 39.02.