Microsoft Has a Good Quarter but Shaves Outlook
Updated from 7:03 p.m. EDT
Software colossus Microsoft(MSFT Quote) reported fourth-quarter results Thursday that beat Wall Street estimates after excluding an $806 million investment-impairment charge. The company lowered guidance modestly for the fiscal full-year 2003. For the fourth quarter ended in June, the world's largest software maker posted net income of $1.53 billion, or 28 cents a share, including an after-tax charge for investment impairments of $806 million, or 15 cents a share. Without that charge, net income came in at 43 cents a share. A year ago, the company earned $65 million, or 1 cent a share. That included after-tax charges for investment impairments of $2.63 billion, or 47 cents a share. The Redmond, Wash., company said revenue rose 10% to $7.25 billion from $6.58 billion reported a year ago. Revenue was flat sequentially. Analysts surveyed by Thomson Financial/First Call were expecting Microsoft to earn 42 cents a share on $7.08 billion in revenue in the fourth quarter. "We believe the macroeconomic environment will continue to be challenging in the short term," CFO John Connors said on a postclose conference call. Later, however, he added, "It is our expectation that things improve modestly throughout the year." Microsoft said it expects first-quarter revenue to range from $7 billion to $7.1 billion and earnings per share to range from 42 cents to 43 cents a share. Wall Street was expecting first-quarter earnings of 42 cents a share and revenue of $7.11 billion.- Loading Comments...
- Loading Comments...
Recent Comments
Featured Photo Galleries
-
U.S. Stocks Rally on Growing Prospects for Bailout of Greece
BusinessWeek Online
-
Google Adds 'Buzz' to Gmail
The Wall Street Journal.
-
Japan Airlines Decides to Stick With American Airlines
New York Times
-
UBS Returns to Profit but Clouds Linger
New York Times
-
Euro bounces back against dollar
BBC
-
Why fret about Greece?
The Economist
-
Ore Increases Boost Steel Prices
The Wall Street Journal.
-
Stiglitz Sees No Greek Default as ‘Speculative Attacks’ Persist
BusinessWeek Online
-
Tuesday Reads
The Big Picture
-
Bipartisan Health Reform Is Still Possible
Forbes.com: Business News
| Dow Jones | S&P 500 | NASDAQ | 10-Year Note | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 10,058.64 | 1,070.52 | 2,150.87 | 36.33 |
Oil *
72.02
|
|
UP
150.25
|
UP
13.78
|
UP
24.82
|
UP
0.41
|
10 Yr
3.63%
SPDR Gold
105.45
|
|
+1.52%
|
+1.30%
|
+1.17%
|
+1.14%
|
Data delayed 20 minutes |
More From TheStreet
Latest HeadlinesBrokerage Partners
Sponsored Links














