My Blog
Technology

Microsoft says China and Russia hurt its earnings

Microsoft says China and Russia hurt its earnings
Microsoft says China and Russia hurt its earnings



The tech giant on Tuesday attributed lower-than-expected earnings to developments in China and Russia, including the former’s extended Covid lockdowns and the latter’s war against Ukraine.

Microsoft (MSFT) recorded $51.9 billion in revenue and $16.7 billion in profit, up 12% and 2%, respectively, from the same period last year but lower than forecasts from analysts surveyed by Refinitiv.

“Extended production shutdowns in China” resulted in a $300 million hit, the company said in its earnings release, adding that it spent $126 million to “significantly scale down” its operations in Russia because of the war in Ukraine.

There were also more universal issues, however. Microsoft’s jobs platform LinkedIn suffered from a reduction in advertising spend, along with Microsoft’s search and news business, that resulted in a revenue decline of over $100 million.

Amid the broader tech industry downturn, Microsoft said it undertook a “a strategic realignment” of its business that resulted in $113 million spent on employee severance (excluding Russia).

Microsoft stock dipped around 1% lower in after-hours trading.

There were some bright spots, however — foremost among them Microsoft’s cloud business. The company’s cloud revenue for the quarter was $25 billion, a 28% increase from the same quarter last year.

“In a dynamic environment we saw strong demand, took share, and increased customer commitment to our cloud platform,” Microsoft’s executive vice president and chief financial officer Amy Hood said in a statement.

Haris Anwar, a senior analyst at Investing.com, said the cloud growth reflected Microsoft’s continued durability.

“Today’s results are very much reflecting the impact of a challenging economic environment which is hurting almost every mega tech company,” he said in a statement. But the strong cloud performance indicates that “large and small companies continue to spend on their IT infrastructure, a trend which will continue to support Microsoft even if the economy slips into a recession,” he added.

Related posts

Best Prime Day Roku Deals: Slick Savings on Streaming Devices and TVs

newsconquest

Craving Sugar? Natural Alternatives Packed With Health Benefits

newsconquest

How much trouble is Twitter in with regulators?

newsconquest