Microsoft stock punished
SEATTLE: Investors wiped $35 billion off Microsoft Corp’s market value on Tuesday without any clear-cut, single explanation.The world’s largest software company, whose shares had climbed about 30 percent over the past 12 months to near 15-year highs, instead worried investors with a series of troubling signals in its earnings report
By our correspondents
January 29, 2015
SEATTLE: Investors wiped $35 billion off Microsoft Corp’s market value on Tuesday without any clear-cut, single explanation.
The world’s largest software company, whose shares had climbed about 30 percent over the past 12 months to near 15-year highs, instead worried investors with a series of troubling signals in its earnings report and conference call on Monday.
“The results weren’t that bad,” said Scott Kessler, an analyst at Standard & Poor’s Capital IQ. “What really struck people was that it wasn’t just one thing and it wasn’t just a handful of things that had obvious or easy fixes.”
The panoply of Microsoft’s problems included an unexpectedly soggy PC market after a buying rush sparked by the end of Windows XP, an ongoing dip in companies’ spending on Office software, problems in Japan and China and a strong US dollar eating away at the value of its huge overseas revenues.
Investors were aware of most of those issues before Monday, but the combination of concerns pushed Microsoft’s stock down 9.25 percent to $42.66, its biggest one day fall since Chief Executive Satya Nadella took over last February.
Until Tuesday, Nadella had enjoyed fanatical support from investors, who lapped up his plan to redesign Microsoft as a leader in cloud and mobile computing.
There are now signs that investors are more skeptical of how quickly Nadella can drag the PC-based titan into the mobile world.
“They made a splash with Office for iPad, but it remains to be seen to what extent they are really going to be able to pull through substantial percentages of their legacy applications business to the cloud,” said Kessler. Some investors feel Microsoft is not helping itself in how it explains the financial effects of its move into the cloud, for example shifting Office customers from installed versions to the cloud-powered online version called Office 365.
The world’s largest software company, whose shares had climbed about 30 percent over the past 12 months to near 15-year highs, instead worried investors with a series of troubling signals in its earnings report and conference call on Monday.
“The results weren’t that bad,” said Scott Kessler, an analyst at Standard & Poor’s Capital IQ. “What really struck people was that it wasn’t just one thing and it wasn’t just a handful of things that had obvious or easy fixes.”
The panoply of Microsoft’s problems included an unexpectedly soggy PC market after a buying rush sparked by the end of Windows XP, an ongoing dip in companies’ spending on Office software, problems in Japan and China and a strong US dollar eating away at the value of its huge overseas revenues.
Investors were aware of most of those issues before Monday, but the combination of concerns pushed Microsoft’s stock down 9.25 percent to $42.66, its biggest one day fall since Chief Executive Satya Nadella took over last February.
Until Tuesday, Nadella had enjoyed fanatical support from investors, who lapped up his plan to redesign Microsoft as a leader in cloud and mobile computing.
There are now signs that investors are more skeptical of how quickly Nadella can drag the PC-based titan into the mobile world.
“They made a splash with Office for iPad, but it remains to be seen to what extent they are really going to be able to pull through substantial percentages of their legacy applications business to the cloud,” said Kessler. Some investors feel Microsoft is not helping itself in how it explains the financial effects of its move into the cloud, for example shifting Office customers from installed versions to the cloud-powered online version called Office 365.
-
Kanye West's Best Songs: Fans Argue Over Bold Top 10 Ranking On Social Media -
King Charles Secretly Relies On Advice From THIS Royal -
Jennifer Garner Reveals Beauty Choice She Makes As Botox Alternative In Her 50s -
Kate Middleton Drops Four-word Message For Young Girl After Wales Visit -
Shamed Andrew Uncensored ‘massages’ Should Be Refunded To Public -
Kylie Kelce Reveals Rules She Wants Daughter Bennett To Learn At 3: No More 'passies' -
Smartphone Market Set For Biggest-ever Decline In 2026 -
Mud, Rain, Loincloths: All About Japan’s 200-year-old Harvest Wrestling Ritual -
Jonathan Majors Set To Make Explosive Comeback To Acting After 2023 Conviction -
Next James Bond: Why Jacob Elordi May Never Get 007 Role? -
Maddox Drops Pitt From Surname In Credits Of Angelina Jolie’s New Film 'Couture' Despite Truce From Father's End In Legal Battle -
Meghan Markle Adds Diamonds To Engagement Ring For Jordan Trip -
Burger King Launches AI Chatbot To Track Employee Politeness -
Andrew’s Woes Amid King Charles’ Cancer Battle Triggers Harry Into Action For ‘stiff Upper Lip’ Type Dad -
Experts Warn Andrew’s Legal Troubles In UK Could Be Far From Over -
Teyana Taylor Reflects On Dreams Turning Into Reality Amid Major Score