Microsoft profit hurt by loss-making Nokia

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Microsoft profit hurt by loss-making Nokia

But phone unit forecast to soon break even.

Microsoft aims to get its loss-making Nokia phone unit to break even within two years, a forecast which helped its stock rise in after-hours trade.

The world's largest software company reported a 7 percent dip in quarterly profit last night, chiefly due to incorporating the struggling handset business of the Finnish mobile pioneer.

Microsoft's chief financial officer Amy Hood told analysts the company plans to take US$1 billion in costs out of the Nokia operation and stop its losses by fiscal 2016 - which ends in June 2016 - following massive job cuts announced last week.

That cheered Wall Street, which was not expecting such decisive action.

"The expense guidance around Nokia was much better than feared," said Daniel Ives, an analyst at FBR Capital Markets. "While there is still some heavy lifting ahead, it appears brighter days are on the horizon for Microsoft after a decade of pain and frustration."

Microsoft shares hit new 14-year highs over the past week, and were up 1.1 percent at US$45.33 after hours.

Nokia, which Microsoft bought in April for US$7.2 billion in an attempt to take on Apple and Samsung in the smartphone market, added almost US$2 billion to Microsoft's quarterly revenue, but posted an operating loss of US$692 million, which included some one-time costs.

Nokia's Lumia smartphones, while well-reviewed, have not been as successful as Microsoft hoped, capturing no more than 4 percent of the global market.

Lumia sales hit 5.8 million for the nine weeks of the quarter that Nokia was part of Microsoft. That compares with 35.2 million iPhone sales in the quarter.

Microsoft is in the process of drastically reducing Nokia's operation, closing some facilities and cutting about half of its 25,000 workforce, as it looks to rein in costs and refocus on cloud-computing under a plan launched by new Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella last week.

"We will be relentless in our focus on our core, agile work and life experiences and the two platforms that support it, the cloud operating system and the device operating system and hardware," Nadella said on the call with analysts.

A slight recovery in the personal computer market, which was essentially flat over the past three months after two years of declines, helped sales of Microsoft's core Windows and Office products in the quarter.

Overall quarterly revenue rose 17 percent to US$23.4 billion, above analysts' average estimate of US$23 billion, although the bulk of that was due to the addition of sales from Nokia.

Microsoft reported fiscal fourth-quarter profit of US$4.6 billion, or 55 cents per share, compared with US$4.96 billion, or 59 cents per share, in the year-ago quarter.

Wall Street had expected 60 cents per share, on average, although it is not clear how analysts had factored in the performance and cost of integrating the Nokia operation.

 

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