A store display of Microsoft's next-generation console, the Xbox One at
Best Buy in Union Square in New York November 19, 2013. Microsoft soared
to record revenues in the last quarter the company said Thursday,
confounding Wall Street forecasts on the back of strong demand for Xbox
consoles, Surface tablets and Internet "cloud" services. PHOTO/FILE
SAN FRANCISCO,
Microsoft
soared to record revenues in the last quarter the company said
Thursday, confounding Wall Street forecasts on the back of strong demand
for Xbox consoles, Surface tablets and Internet "cloud" services.
The
US-based technology titan reported net income of Ksh564 billion ($6.56
billion) on revenue that hit a record high of Ksh2.1 trillion ($24.52
billion) in the quarter that ended December 31.
"Our
Commercial segment continues to outpace the overall market, and our
Devices and Consumer segment had a great holiday quarter," said outgoing
chief executive Steve Ballmer.
Microsoft shares
climbed more than three percent to $37.25 in after-market trades on the
Nasdaq following release of the earnings figures.
"We
delivered record revenue as demand for our business offerings remains
high and we made strong progress in our Devices and Consumer segment,"
Microsoft chief financial officer Amy Hood said in the earnings release.
Sales
of Surface tablets more than doubled from the previous quarter to hit
$893 million, and Microsoft sold 7.4 million Xbox videogame consoles,
with 3.9 million of those being new-generation Xbox One.
CONTINOUS INNOVATION
Bing's
share of the Internet search market grew to 18.2 percent while its
share of the online search ad market grew about a third, according to
Microsoft.
Meanwhile, money made from selling Windows
software to computer makers slid by three percent due to continue soft
demand by consumers for personal computers, according to Microsoft.
Microsoft
built its empire on packaged computer software but has been under
pressure to adapt to lifestyles revolving around mobile devices and
programs offered as services hosted as services in the Internet "cloud."
Microsoft reported that cloud services to businesses and consumers posted strong growth.
Ballmer
late last year unexpectedly announced he is stepping down to clear the
way for a successor who will help the company reinvent itself for the
mobile Internet Age.
"Unless you're constantly
inventing something new, you're old and tired," Ballmer said at a
conference in Rome in December. "Today we're having to remake
ourselves."
Microsoft has indicated that the hunt for a new chief executive should be over early this year.
Analysts
eagerly awaiting word of who Ballmer's successor with are also watching
to see how active co-founder and board member Bill Gates will be in
running the company.
Ballmer was a classmate and friend of Gates from their days at Harvard University in the 1970s.
He took over from Gates in 2000 but said he will step down by August 2014.
When
Ballmer took over, Microsoft was the undisputed tech sector leader, and
the world's largest company in market value. But in recent years its
core business has been shaken as consumers began to move from desktop
and laptop PCs to mobile devices.
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