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Microsoft stock up 5% despite missing revenue estimates

"In a dynamic environment, we saw strong demand, took a share, and increased customer commitment to our cloud platform. Commercial bookings grew 25 percent and Microsoft Cloud revenue was $25 billion, up 28 percent year over year," said Amy Hood.

Microsoft stock up 5% despite missing revenue estimates File Photo

New Delhi: Microsoft has reported its slowest revenue growth since 2020 but strong future guidance lifted its stock up 5 percent in extended trading after revealing numbers for the quarter that ended June 30. The company reported $51.9 billion in revenue -- up 12 percent (year-on-year) with $16.7 billion in net income that was up 2 percent."We see real opportunity to help every customer in every industry use digital technology to overcome today's challenges and emerge stronger," said Satya Nadella, chairman and chief executive officer of Microsoft late on Tuesday.

"No company is better positioned than Microsoft to help organisations deliver on their digital imperative -- so they can do more with less," Nadella added. Revenue in Intelligent Cloud was $20.9 billion and increased 20 percent. The company reported $14.4 billion in revenue in the 'More Personal Computing' vertical. (Also Read: Gold price today, July 27: Check rates of yellow metal in your city)

However, Xbox content and services revenue decreased 6 percent. The sales of its Surface laptops increased 10 percent while LinkedIn revenue increased 26 percent."In a dynamic environment, we saw strong demand, took a share, and increased customer commitment to our cloud platform. Commercial bookings grew 25 percent and Microsoft Cloud revenue was $25 billion, up 28 percent year over year," said Amy Hood, executive vice president, and CFO."As we begin a new fiscal year, we remain committed to balancing operational discipline with continued investments in key strategic areas to drive future growth," Hood added. (Also Read: iPhone 12 gets massive price cut on Flipkart Saving Days Sale, check offer)

The company said that the extended production shutdowns in China and a deteriorating PC market in June contributed to a negative impact on Windows OEM revenue of over $300 million.

"Reductions in advertising spend contributed to a negative impact on LinkedIn as well as Search and news advertising revenue of over $100 million," it informed. Microsoft expected $49.25 billion to $50.25 billion in fiscal first-quarter revenue.