NEWS / GENERAL

Plodding PC sales weigh down Microsoft profit

16 Jan, 2012, 1:21 pm IST | by | General

Microsoft Corp is starting the new year much as it did the one just ended - grappling with weak computer sales tearing a hole in its core Windows business, while it gropes its way slowly into the faster-growing mobile phone and tablet markets. Shares of the world's largest software company are pretty much where they were a year ago too, and few expect much to change after the latest results are announced on Thursday. "(It is) clear that investors will continue to need to be patient," Barclays Capital analyst Raimo Lenschow said in a research note on Friday. "There could be positive short-term momentum ... but we first need to see proper evidence of mobile/tablet success rather than just signs of hope."

 

Spam reduced by 39 per cent after latest takedown

Grappling with low scores 

 

 

Microsoft, which just wrapped up its last Consumer Electronics Show, gave a taste of the tough times it is facing last week. Speaking with analysts on Tuesday, the head of marketing for the Windows unit flagged the most recent decline in PC sales and warned that the floods in Thailand disrupting crucial disk-drive shipments would put a drag on numbers for a while, making sales hard to foresee.

 

"I just think it's going to take a couple of quarters to work itself out," said Tami Reller, speaking about the effect of the shortages. "It would be naive to believe otherwise. The level in each of the quarters, I think that's hard to exactly predict." Reller's cautious outlook was confirmed by industry numbers released a day after, when Gartner reported a 1.4 percent decline in global PC sales for the fourth quarter. The research firm predicted that the disk-drive shortages would be most felt in the first half of this year.

More worryingly for Microsoft, Gartner noted "continuously low consumer PC demand" over the normally buoyant holiday shopping season in the United States, and a lack of excitement so far over the newest lightweight laptops championed by Intel Corp .

 

That's bad news for Microsoft, whose financial success is still closely bound to computer sales, despite its forays into gaming, servers, Internet search and phones. Wall Street expects sales of $20.9 billion for the fiscal second quarter - which would be a 5 percent increase from a year ago and its biggest quarterly sales on record - but a net profit of only 76 cents per share, a slight dip from 77 cents last year.

 

WAITING FOR 8

Microsoft's shares have moved higher in the past six weeks - as they often do before earnings - but they tend to fall after its numbers are released. The stock has fluctuated aimlessly between $23 and $29 since May 2010, the last time they topped $30, despite hitting sales records and increases in the dividend.

 

Pointing to the stock's 9.7 price to earnings ratio - just over half its 10-year average - most Wall Street analysts have 'buy' ratings on the stock and target prices in the $30s. But the good news that is meant to propel the stock afresh never arrives. The latest hopes are pinned on Microsoft's new phones - pushed aggressively at CES last week - and on Windows 8 later this year.

 

Chief Executive Steve Ballmer was very visible at CES, jumping from one place to the next promoting phones that use the latest Windows software. Nokia's Lumia 900 looked slick and attracted a lot of attention. The Lumia 900 in the United States will have a front-facing camera and work on wireless firms' new high-speed networks, said Bill Koefoed, Microsoft's head of investor relations at CES. "We will put plenty of marketing muscle behind it," he said.

 

However, no date was set for its U.S. launch with AT&T . Likewise, Microsoft would not be tempted into announcing any release date for the mobile-friendly, touch-enabled Windows 8, which will provide its entry into the exploding tablet market. All the company has said is that a beta test version will come out in February, which generally means a full release is at least six months down the road from there.

Some industry watchers forecast that machines running Windows 8 will not be on sale until early 2013, by which time Apple Inc's iPad will have almost three years' head start.

 

Reuters

Tags: Microsoft Corp. , Microsoft , poor PC sales , mobile , tablet , Consumer Electronics Show ,

RELATED STORIES

The battle's on for control of the video dial tone

The battle's on for control of the video dial tone

Cisco Systems Inc's attempt to convince a European court to impose tougher conditions on Microsoft Corp's acquisition of Skype signals that ...

Nokia assembly moving to Asia means 4k less jobs in Finland, Hungary, Mexico

Microsoft gains ground in patent feud with Motorola over texting

Microsoft goes So.cl

Microsoft builds Kinectacles, Kinect Bridge for the blind and speech impaired

Intel Windows 8 tablets to hit markets in November

Microsoft joins Hybrid Memory Cube consortium to speed-up industry adoption

 

OPINIONS

Padmini Harchandrai

The latest "should they-shouldn't they" event with Facebook is the lift of the minimu...

MORE OPINIONS

Leaked Images, Availability, Pricing,
Specs, Pre-order

features

Top 5 potential Gmail alternatives

Top 5 potential Gmail alternatives

Google’s Gmail service is arguably the most advanced and feature-packed...

By Naina Khedekar

The Future of Broadband - views from industry leaders

The Future of Broadband - views from industry leaders

One of the other events that took place at the same venue as the recent...

By Rossi Fernandes

Tech2 goes around the World IT Show 2012, Seoul

Tech2 goes around the World IT Show 2012, Seoul

Tech2 was part of an entourage that was invited for the Korea IT Show and...

By Rossi Fernandes

MORE FEATURES