Microsoft’s Q3 Earnings: Eyes On The Cloud, But Windows Supply Chain Also In Focus

 | Apr 27, 2020 05:06PM ET

Last quarter, Microsoft's (NASDAQ:MSFT) solid earnings results helped kick off a sharp rally in the stock. Part of this rise had to do with Microsoft’s guidance, which was better than many analysts had expected.

Soon after, Microsoft, along with the broader market, went through a steep decline as coronavirus fears began reshaping the economic landscape. Fuelling the slide, Microsoft warned that it wouldn’t meet that positive guidance because of supply-chain disruptions. But in mid-March, Microsoft shares caught an updraft, helping it gain steam heading into its Q3 reporting season. Shares are actually up slightly year-to-date, an accomplishment that’s hard to find in a market where the S&P 500 is down more than 15% (see chart below).

We know that COVID-19 has roiled markets overall, creating wicked short-term volatility and longer-term uncertainty. We know that factory shutdowns and transportation disruptions have slowed the supply chain. But some companies are more broadly diversified than others and hold significant cash in reserve. That’s true for Microsoft and has served it well in this crisis. Microsoft has several main engines that might help it steam through whatever storm may be on the horizon.

The Intelligent Cloud — Microsoft’s Floating Growth Engine

Virtual access to all things social, be it work or play, may be a critical element of the COVID-19 pandemic — at least the economic part, anyway. Generally, it helps to have things virtualized and digitized now.

But are these urgent needs the tip of the iceberg? In a recent conference call, Microsoft’s CEO Satya Nadella would argue that it is. “Stepping back from the quarter and reflecting more broadly on the next decade, the defining secular trend will be the increasing rate of digitization of people, places and things,” he said in the company’s last quarterly earnings call.

Microsoft’s Intelligent Cloud, which includes Azure, GitHub, SQL Server, Windows Server and other enterprise services, may be among Microsoft’s most formidable segments leaning toward that trend or, what Nadella describes as “innovation momentum.”

Looking ahead, “every customer will need a distributed computing fabric across the cloud and the edge, to power their mission-critical workloads,” said Nadella. And to top it off, according to company reports, Microsoft has “more data center regions than any other cloud provider” — a strong volley aimed toward the virtuality arena.

Last quarter, Microsoft reported Intelligent Cloud revenue at $11.9 billion, up 27%. This figure also beat analyst estimates of $11.40 billion, according to a CNBC report. Azure’s revenue grew by 64% in fiscal Q2, server and other cloud products increasing by 30%, and enterprise services increased by 6%.

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