Tech giant
reveals plans for new touchscreen devices and Windows 8 'Blue' as revenue rise
beats analysts' forecasts
Microsoft
Windows 8 Photograph
Microsoft
is working with manufacturers to produce a line of small Windows-powered
touchscreen devices to compete with fast-selling tablets such as the iPad Mini
and Amazon Kindle Fire.
Peter
Klein, Microsoft's chief financial officer, told investors and analysts on a
conference call on Thursday that the new devices will be available in coming
months at "competitive" prices.
Rumours
that Microsoft would seek to compete in the fast-growing
"mini-tablet" space have been growing over the past weeks.
Klein also
hinted that an upcoming revision to Windows 8, codenamed "Blue" and
due this year, will reinstate the "Start" button that has been
familiar to Windows users since 1995. The changes will be partly due to
"customer feedback", Klein said.
Earlier in
April the research companies Gartner and IDC reported a slump in PC sales, with
IDC blaming it in part on Windows 8 itself because it said the new interface
was puzzling would-be buyers.
Yet
Microsoft shrugged off a 14% slump in PC sales during the first quarter to
report net income of $6.1bn (£3.9m), up 18% from $5.1bn a year ago, beating
analysts' forecasts – though those had been trimmed last month in expectations
that the poor computer shipments would have a deeper impact.
However the
company did not release any figures for licence sales of Windows 8 – a figure
that some had expected to hear. The last update on that came back in January,
when it said it has sold 60m – though the majority of those would be to
manufacturers who bundle Windows with new machines.
In adjusted
figures, allowing for a $733m fine from the European Commission for briefly
failing to offer a choice on browsers, and $1.1bn of "deferred"
Windows revenue, overall revenues would have risen by 8%.
The
"deferred revenue" came from a $15 upgrade offer to Windows 8 on
Windows 7 PCs that were bought after 2 June: accounting rules meant Mcirosoft
couldn't record the full value of those licences until the offers were either
redeemed or expired. That meant that in the recent quarter it added that deferred
revenue to its figures, for a huge boost.
At the
company's largest division, Business, revenue rose 8% from a year ago to
$6.3bn. The increase was 5% adjusting for upgrade offers for the new Office
suite.
But the
story for the Windows division would be less rosy. Including the deferrals,
revenues rose from $4.63bn to $5.70bn, up 23%. But spreading the $1.1bn over
the nine-month period since 2 June, and comparing it with the same period from
2011/12, revenues were up just 4% for a period including two quarters of the
launch of a new version of Windows – usually a driver of growth.
Microsoft
is trying to extend its software into smartphones and tablets as consumers turn
away from PCs, the foundation of its empire. Over the winter, it launched two
larger "convertibles" under the Surface brand, but sales so far have
been slow, with analysts estimating the total at about 1.5m.
In October,
the company took a large stake in Barnes & Noble's digital unit, which
sells a line of entertainment-oriented tablets under the Nook brand.
Outside the
Windows division, Microsoft posted solid results from its Office, software
tools and Xbox divisions.
Even if the
company has a lot of challenges, "there's a lot of good things going on at
Microsoft," said Colin Gillis, an analyst at BGC Partners.
The
company's shares rose $0.81, or 2.8%, to $29.60 in extended trading, after the
release of the report.
Microsoft
also said Klein is leaving at the end of the fiscal year, in June. He has been
in his current role for four years and at the company for 11 years. The company
plans to name a new chief financial officer in the next few weeks.
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