Saturday, January 24, 2009

Microsoft stuns with profit miss, job cuts

NEW YORK, USA: Microsoft Corp stunned Wall Street with disappointing results that included plans to slash up to 5,000 jobs and a warning that profit and revenue will almost certainly drop over the next two quarters.

The news from the world's largest software maker, which had not been expected to report results until after the close of trading on Thursday, sent shock waves across financial markets, pulling down the Nasdaq, and sending U.S. Treasury debt prices higher as investors sought safer assets.

Microsoft's shares dropped as much as 11 per cent to their lowest level since January 1998, adding to a 40 per cent decline in the past year.

The company blamed the miss on the weak PC market and the popularity of low-cost netbook computers, which have combined to badly undercut sales of its Windows operating system.

"Our financial position is solid ... but it is also clear that we are not immune to the effects of the economy," Chief Executive Steve Ballmer told employees in a letter. "Consumers and businesses have reined in spending, which is affecting PC shipments and IT expenditures."

The market has become so volatile, Microsoft cautioned, that it will not issue earnings or revenue forecasts for the rest of its fiscal year ending June 30, 2009 -- other than to predict both will very likely be lower.

"It is pretty bad when things are deteriorating so fast that even the largest companies in the world don't know how rapidly it is happening," said Jefferies analyst Katherine Egbert.

Microsoft posted a profit of $4.17 billion, or 47 cents per share, in its fiscal second quarter ended December 31, versus a profit of $4.71 billion, or 50 cents per share, a year earlier. Analysts were looking for earnings of 49 cents per share, according to Reuters Estimates.

Revenue rose 2 per cent to $16.63 billion, missing the average analyst forecast of $17.1 billion.

Sales in the Windows segment fell 8 per cent, while its Business division, responsible for the Office software package, marked a 1 per cent increase. Revenue at the unit that makes the popular 360 Xbox gaming system rose 3 per cent.

Looking ahead, the Windows business is expected to perform in line with the weak traditional PC market, Microsoft said.


Biggest Job Cuts Ever

Microsoft's staggered elimination of 5,000 jobs -- 1,400 immediately and the rest over 18 months -- amounts to about 5 per cent of its estimated 96,000 work force, the biggest reduction ever by the software maker. Other cost cuts include travel and marketing budgets, and the roster of independent contractors.

"Clearly business conditions are worse than people were expecting," said Richard Williams, analyst at Cross Research. "This is a substantial amount of jobs cuts. Microsoft has never had a layoff like this in my knowledge and it's sending a signal that the times are definitely changing."

The job cuts follow similar moves by other technology firms, including AT&T Inc, Dell Inc, Motorola Inc and Advanced Micro Devices Inc, all of which are suffering from the global economic slowdown.

Microsoft faces a shift by PC buyers to netbooks, which are smaller, stripped-down laptops. Microsoft only gets $60 or less for each sale of Windows for a netbook, compared to $90 for traditional laptops, according to Enderle Group analyst Rob Enderle. Some netbooks also use the rival open-source Linux software instead of Windows.

On a conference call, Ballmer said Microsoft also lost market share to Apple Inc, which on Wednesday posted surprisingly strong results. Ballmer, whose public histrionics often overshadow a sharp intellect and gift for numbers, was serious in tone.

"We are certainly in the midst of a once-in-a-lifetime set of economic conditions," Ballmer said, adding that the company is "dealing with unprecedented ground."

As for the economy, Ballmer said he did not expect a quick rebound.

Still, Ballmer noted that Microsoft will be adding "thousands of jobs" in strategic areas like Internet search, where it has been lagging behind Google Inc, and that he still desires a search partnership with Yahoo Inc.

Ballmer said the result of the job cuts and additions would be an overall staff reduction of 2,000 to 3,000 positions.

But Chief Financial Officer Chris Liddell said he does not expect significant acquisitions this year, despite hopes from some Yahoo shareholders for a buyout.

Shares of Microsoft were down $2.13 at $17.25, after touching an intraday low of $17.17, the weakest level since January 1998. It was the biggest single-day drop in the stock since an 11.38 percent fall on April 28, 2006.


©Reuters

Source - http://www.ciol.com//Global-News/News-Reports/Microsoft-stuns-with-profit-miss%2C-job-cuts/23109115129/0/

Labels:

Wednesday, January 16, 2008

Microsoft Office 2008 for MAC

Office 2008 for Mac includes new versions of Microsoft Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and Entourage, which replaces Outlook for e-mail on the Mac.


After a round of delays, Microsoft (NSDQ: MSFT) is slated to release Office 2008 for Mac to the public on Tuesday at Macworld. It's the first new release of Office for the Mac in almost four years, and the new release isn't just a copy of the Windows-based Office suite.

Office 2008 for Mac includes new versions of Microsoft Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and Entourage, which replaces Outlook for e-mail on the Mac. But it doesn't replace the drop-down menu with the new "Ribbon" interface, as did the PC version of Office 2007 did.

And it adds a few of its own touches. The new Office for Mac apps add something called the Element Gallery, a new menu bar for easily formatting documents. There are also upgraded note-taking and publishing modes for Word.

(See our review of Office 2008 for Mac here.)

Office 2008 for Mac doesn't change everything from the Windows version. It still saves documents as Open XML files; matches the scalability to billions of spreadsheet cells that's found in Excel for Windows; and includes an upgraded version of SmartArt, which turns data and lists into PowerPoint graphics.

One potential negative for Office 2008 for Mac, especially in corporate realms, is that the new software drops support for Visual Basic for Applications. That means macro compatibility could be greatly affected by business power users who choose to upgrade, unless their add-ins were developed in .Net.

Office 2008 for Mac starts off at $149.95 for the Home and Student edition, which includes Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and Entourage. The full version, at $399, adds Exchange support, and the Special Media Edition, at $499, adds Microsoft Expression Media design software. It will have to compete with Apple's much cheaper ($79) iWork suite and even free competitors like NeoOffice that have found a home on some Macs.

Going forward, Office will also have to compete with Web-based suites such as Google (NSDQ: GOOG) Office, and there's little indication whether and how Microsoft's strategy of combining desktop software with Web-based services will play out on the Mac differently than it will on the PC.

Office 2008 for Mac will require Mac OS X v10.4.9 or later, a PowerPC G4 or G5 or Intel (NSDQ: INTC) Core duo processor, 512 Mbytes of RAM, and 1.5 Gbytes free on the hard drive.

Source: Information Week
By: By J. Nicholas Hoover

Labels: , , ,