Microsoft Corp cruised past Wall Street's quarterly profit and revenue forecasts, helped by strong sales of its Office and server software to businesses, sending its shares up 6 per cent after hours.
For
the first quarter, the technology giant posted a 17 per cent increase
in profit to $5.2 billion, or 62 cents per share, up from $4.5 billion,
or 53 cents per share, in the year-ago quarter.
Revenue rose 16 per cent to $18.5 billion, helped by rising sales of its Office software.
Analysts had trimmed profit estimates for Microsoft
over the past three months, concerned by the launch of an ambitious
reorganisation by retiring Chief Executive Steve Ballmer and the pricey
acquisition of Nokia's handset business, even as the company's core
personal computer market ebbs away.
"The earnings report will
positively surprise the market, especially in the context of the soft
expectations going in and the dismal report last quarter," said Todd
Lowenstein, a portfolio manager at fund firm HighMark Capital. "Beating
on revenue and earnings handily will boost confidence that the
reorganization is pivoting them in the right direction."
Technology
is proving one of the most resilient sectors in an uncertain US
economy, with 84 per cent of tech companies beating analysts' earnings
estimates for the latest quarter.
Microsoft, the world's largest software company,
is the latest tech firm to surprise investors with a powerful
performance, coming the same day as Amazon.com Inc eased past average
revenue forecasts.
As part of its reinvention as a "devices and
services" company, Microsoft now reports under two main groups - one
covering its devices and consumer business, and one its commercial
business.
The commercial side was the stronger in the quarter,
posting a 10 per cent increase in revenue, chiefly from selling Office
and server software to businesses. The consumer and hardware group's
revenue rose a more modest 4 per cent, held back by another poor quarter
for the Windows system as sales of personal computers continue to
decline.
According to industry research firm Gartner, PC shipments fell 8.6 per cent
last quarter, confirming a worldwide trend towards tablets that has
benefited Apple Inc and Google Inc but hurt traditional PC stalwarts
Microsoft and Intel Corp.
PC sales have been sliding for the last
18 months, although Microsoft Chief Financial Officer Amy Hood said on
Thursday that there were "signs of stabilisation".
Microsoft said
nothing on Thursday about the board's search for a new CEO after
Ballmer announced in August that he plans to retire within 12 months.
Its shares rose to $35.65 after hours, after closing at $33.72 on Nasdaq.