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Windows
7 Drives Record Profit For Microsoft
Better-than-expected
growth in Microsoft's consumer business, and strong Windows 7 demand, helped
the software giant break a string of disappointing quarterly results.
For Microsoft's fiscal second quarter ended December 31, revenue jumped 14 percent
to just over $19 billion and profit rose 60 percent to $6.6 billion. Earnings per
share leapt 57 percent to 74 cents, far outpacing Wall Street analysts'
expectation of 59 cents per share.
In Microsoft's earnings call, newly anointed CFO Peter Klein, who took over last
month for the departed Chris Liddell, said Microsoft sold roughly 60 million Windows 7 licenses during the first half of its fiscal 2010 year. Consumer SKUs
such as Windows 7 Home Premium helped drive a 35 percent year-on-year increase
in Windows licensing revenue during Q2, according to Klein.
"It
was an exceptional quarter for the Windows division," Klein said in the
call.
Netbooks,
which have been the bane of Microsoft's existence because of their propensity
to eat away at Microsoft's Windows Client division revenue, are starting to
look like less of a threat. Klein estimated that netbooks currently account for
about 11 percent of the PC market, a number that is roughly flat year on year.
Microsoft is trying to become more consumer oriented and the Q2 results suggest it has
made some progress in this area. But Microsoft, of course, has traditionally
made most of its money from business customers, and its outlook in this regard
is decidedly less rosy. Klein admitted that enterprise spending still hasn't
seen any kind of meaningful uptick that would indicate a recovery is imminent.
The server
hardware market was stronger than expected during the quarter, and customer
adoption of Windows Server 2008 R2, as well as Microsoft's virtualization and
management offerings, continued to grow during the quarter, Klein said. But the
Microsoft Business Division saw revenue drop 3 percent due to the weak IT
spending environment. And annuity licensing revenue, which Microsoft derives
from volume licensing agreements, was also flat year-on-year.
Klein said
Enterprise Agreement sales cycles are starting to lengthen and that overall, Microsoft's unearned revenue, much of which comes from volume licensing, was
down slightly for the year, he said.
This is
important because annuity licensing has acted as a cushion for Microsoft's
revenue in the past. Last July, Bob Muglia, president of Microsoft's Server and
Tools division, acknowledged this in a meeting with financial analysts.
"What
you have in essence is a shock absorber to the business," Muglia told
financial analysts last July.
Elsewhere, Microsoft's Entertainment and Devices division saw revenue fall 11 percent, and
Online Services division revenue dropped 5 percent, including a 2 percent drop
in online advertising. Microsoft was quick to point out that Bing has gained
market share in each of the 7 months since its launch, but has been impacted by
declining display advertising rates in international markets.
While it's
no doubt encouraging to Microsoft executives to see the Windows cash cow back
on its feet, the questions about its enterprise business have probably stifled
any champagne cork popping in Redmond. With Microsoft set to launch Windows
Azure as a paid service next week, all eyes will be on the Server and Tools
division in next quarter's earnings call.
By Kevin
McLaughlin, ChannelWeb
Windows 7 is the next version of Windows client
operating system from Microsoft built on the core fundamentals of Windows
Vista. Windows 7 offers greater reliability and performance with an improvement
in the Security features that were already available in Windows Vista. Windows 7 offers improved navigation, a new taskbar and a streamlined UI so that common
tasks done in Windows are done easier and more quickly. These are some of the
topics that will be demonstrated in the seminar: New Taskbar, Libraries,
Ribbon, Background Processes-Services and Tasks, Multi-Touch.
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