What The Buy Side Expects From Microsoft

 | Apr 24, 2014 02:06AM ET

Microsoft Corp. (NASDAQ:MSFT) is set to report FQ3 2014 earnings after the market closes on Thursday, April 24th. This quarter CEO Satya Nadella made a breakthrough announcement that for the first time ever Microsoft Office will be sold on the iOS operating system. Historically the war was always between Windows and Apple operating systems, but today the battles are being fought over mobile where Apple’s iOS is going head to head with Google’s Android OS. It appears that Nadella will continue to shift Microsoft toward becoming a cloud services and software as a service provider. Last quarter Microsoft reported much higher EPS and better revenue than the Street had called for and investors expect similar results Thursday.

The information below is derived from data submitted to the Estimize.com platform by a set of Buy Side and Independent analyst contributors.

The current Wall Street consensus expectation is for Microsoft to report 62c EPS and $20.463B revenue while the current Estimize.com consensus from 69 Buy Side and Independent contributing analysts is 67c EPS and $20.798B in revenue. This quarter the buy-side as represented by the Estimize.com community is expecting Microsoft to beat the Wall Street consensus by a wide significant margin.

Over the previous 6 quarters the consensus from Estimize.com has been more accurate than Wall Street in forecasting Microsoft’s EPS and revenue 5 times and 3 times respectively. By tapping into a wider range of contributors including hedge-fund analysts, asset managers, independent research shops, students, and non professional investors Estimize has created a data set that is more accurate than Wall Street up to 69.5% of the time, but more importantly it does a better job of representing the market’s actual expectations. It has been confirmed by Deutsche Bank Quant. Research and an independent academic study from Rice University that stock prices tend to react with a more strongly associated degree to the expectation benchmark from Estimize than from the Wall Street consensus.

The magnitude of the difference between the Wall Street and Estimize consensus numbers often identifies opportunities to take advantage of expectations that may not have been priced into the market. In this case we are seeing a large difference between the two groups’ EPS expectations and a moderate delta in revenue consensuses.