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posted by janrinok on Wednesday July 22 2015, @09:21PM   Printer-friendly
from the ouch dept.

We knew that Microsoft's quarter was going to be a rough one after it announced a $7.6 billion write-down of the Devices and Services division it purchased from Nokia last year, and so it has come to pass: on revenue of $22.2 billion, the company had a gross margin of $14.7 billion, an operating loss of $2.05 billion, a net after-tax loss of $3.20 billion, and a $0.40 loss per share.

This was driven by a $7.5 billion goodwill and asset impairment charge from Nokia Devices and Services, coupled with a new $0.78 billion restructuring charge, and a further $0.16 billion cost for integration and previously announced restructuring. In total, the company booked $8.4 billion of losses in the quarter.

This loss eclipses the $0.49 billion loss in that fourth quarter of its 2012 fiscal year that was driven largely by the $6.2 billion write-down of the aQuantive advertising firm.

But even absent that massive hit, the quarter wasn't a good one. That $22.2 billion of revenue is down 5 percent on the same quarter last year, and excluding the one-off Nokia charges, operating income was $6.39 billion, down 3 percent year on year. The company's Device and Consumer segment was down sharply, as sales of non-volume-licensed Windows and Office continued their fall on the back of a weak PC market: Windows license revenue from OEM preinstalls was down 22 percent, and consumer sales of Office were down 42 percent. Windows Phone revenue was down an even sharper 68 percent, due to a decrease in royalty payments, though sales of Lumia hardware were up more than 10 percent to 8.4 million, compared to 7.5 million in the same quarter a year ago.

Microsoft (MS) Office has always been a main revenue engine for them, so the 42 percent drop in consumer sales may be the most sobering part of the report, not so much for total sales (corporate are what's important) but as a canary in the coal mine for Office.


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  • (Score: 2) by aristarchus on Thursday July 23 2015, @07:03AM

    by aristarchus (2645) on Thursday July 23 2015, @07:03AM (#212578) Journal

    "No one ever got fired, or lost money, from going with Microsoft."

    Just glad I moved my 24 Billion from MSFT to LINUX stocks. We can always trust the Market to sort these things out, unless it is riddled with monopolies, unethical business practices, collusion with covert agencies, or Micro$oft. Yes, go ahead, make my millenium, with extra philanthropy. The advantage of having been alive for 2400 years is not just knowing what women really want, it is being able to predict market bubbles rather accurately. Micro$oft is a variegated purple tulip, worth a whole lot per bulb, until the crash came. And I seem to recall that the crash was when they tried to turn tulip bulbs into smartphones. The disadvantage to living so long is the loss of distinct memory, I think, If I recall correctly.

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