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MS Earnings Call - FY23Q2 |

Gudji

Member
party animal ...................no more

xbox-phil-spencer.gif
Season 11 Nbc GIF by The Voice
 

SlimySnake

Flashless at the Golden Globes
Need to compare with the competition but on a first glance, gamepass up but everything down significantly? What happened to GP boosts software sales?
Software sales are down across the board, but their competition PS5 sold more units this year than it did in 2021.
 

StreetsofBeige

Gold Member
Another great quarter. Over $16 billion profit. Gaming sunk, but thats the nature of a lot of tech after a few years of easy sales during covid as people were at home more often.


Earnings Release FY23 Q2
  • · Revenue was $52.7 billion and increased 2%
  • · Operating income was $20.4 billion GAAP and $21.6 billion non-GAAP, and decreased 8% and 3%, respectively
  • · Net income was $16.4 billion GAAP and $17.4 billion non-GAAP, and decreased 12% and 7%, respectively
  • · Diluted earnings per share was $2.20 GAAP and $2.32 non-GAAP, and decreased 11% and 6%, respectively
“The next major wave of computing is being born, as the Microsoft Cloud turns the world’s most advanced AI models into a new computing platform,” said Satya Nadella, chairman and chief executive officer of Microsoft. “We are committed to helping our customers use our platforms and tools to do more with less today and innovate for the future in the new era of AI.”

“We are focused on operational excellence as we continue to invest to drive growth. Microsoft Cloud revenue was $27.1 billion, up 22% (up 29% in constant currency) year-over-year as our commercial offerings continue to drive value for our customers,” said Amy Hood, executive vice president and chief financial officer of Microsoft.

EWqjybJ.jpg
 

Three

Gold Member
Really disappointing results in all the gaming related aspects.
The sales failure of the super discounted Series S during the holiday season and the declining revenues in services (Gamepass) are especially concerning for them.
It's basically the whole "value" focused part of their strategy failing.
The other part is about boosting contents through acquisitions and here who knows how the whole Activision drama will end.
I believe gamepass was up but content was down. Could be wrong though.
 
Another great quarter. Over $16 billion profit. Gaming sunk, but thats the nature of a lot of tech after a few years of easy sales during covid as people were at home more often.


Earnings Release FY23 Q2
  • · Revenue was $52.7 billion and increased 2%
  • · Operating income was $20.4 billion GAAP and $21.6 billion non-GAAP, and decreased 8% and 3%, respectively
  • · Net income was $16.4 billion GAAP and $17.4 billion non-GAAP, and decreased 12% and 7%, respectively
  • · Diluted earnings per share was $2.20 GAAP and $2.32 non-GAAP, and decreased 11% and 6%, respectively
“The next major wave of computing is being born, as the Microsoft Cloud turns the world’s most advanced AI models into a new computing platform,” said Satya Nadella, chairman and chief executive officer of Microsoft. “We are committed to helping our customers use our platforms and tools to do more with less today and innovate for the future in the new era of AI.”

“We are focused on operational excellence as we continue to invest to drive growth. Microsoft Cloud revenue was $27.1 billion, up 22% (up 29% in constant currency) year-over-year as our commercial offerings continue to drive value for our customers,” said Amy Hood, executive vice president and chief financial officer of Microsoft.

EWqjybJ.jpg

I mean their Azure & Office offerings are pulling heavy duty. Windows is doing okay, it seems.

But c'mon, most of us only really care about Xbox here and for that division, results were quite bad. More than some of us even could've predicted, I'd say.

I believe gamepass was up but content was down. Could be wrong though.

It was but, Game Pass being "up" doesn't really mean anything. For starters they are probably referring to PC Game Pass, and any growth there is going to look massive percentage-wise because they barely had much subscribers there even this time last year.

It also doesn't say much about what contributions to revenue it accounted for, because there are so many ways to cheap out on the typical ARPU for Game Pass via $1 conversion deals, free trials, MS Reward points, etc.
 
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reksveks

Member
I believe gamepass was up but content was down. Could be wrong though.
Yep, content and services is a single segment.

Morre than some of us even could've predicted, I'd say.
They were in line with MS's forecasts so maybe some of us were just off.

Software sales are down across the board, but their competition PS5 sold more units this year than it did in 2021.
Had this same conversation in previous earning calls, only for Sony to show similar declines in software revenue. Unfortunately the some on the forum doesn't learn. Think we need to see where this content and service decline ends up in comparison to the industry.
 
The 13% decline is the from the same Oct to Dec quarter one year ago isn't it? That is bad considering production was limited due to component shortages in 2021 and you would expect an increase in sales now that they can produce more.

EDIT: Realised hardware is revenue based so the unit decline could be less than 13% due to the cheap deals for the Series S over the holiday and the Series S possibly being a higher percentage of total XBS sales. Last year was 4.4 milion for the holiday quarter so a 13% decline would be 3.83 million but probably around 4 million or marginally more due to the aforementioned reasons, either way these numbers are not good.
 
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IntentionalPun

Ask me about my wife's perfect butthole

Less people bought consoles, and more of them bought Series S than X than previous year, most likely.

Not a good year for Xbox financially it seems... that "partially offset by Gamepass subs" thing isn't exactly some great news.. eventually they may find a real causation between GP subs going up, and revenue going down.

2023 truly is going to be a huge year for XBox at Microsoft.. I have a feeling if they don't have a great year the pocket books might not be so open.

Of course if the buyout goes through we'll instantly see their revenue balloon either way.
 

Elios83

Member
I believe gamepass was up but content was down. Could be wrong though.

No you're right, I read that content/services is down and since that includes Gamepass I thought that was down as well.
In any case the situation is not good at all.
 
Yep, content and services is a single segment.


They were in line with MS's forecasts so maybe some of us were just off.

I thought for FY 2023 Q2 they expected to stay relatively flat YoY? Did they revise that forecast?

Less people bought consoles, and more of them bought Series S than X than previous year, most likely.

Not a good year for Xbox financially it seems... that "partially offset by Gamepass subs" thing isn't exactly some great news.. eventually they may find a real causation between GP subs going up, and revenue going down.

Don't forget, Phil Spencer said Game Pass on console had "stagnated" and that most of their growth was coming from PC. But considering PC Game Pass was already so much less than on Xbox to begin with, something like 159% growth or whatnot probably isn't that much in absolute numbers as it'd seem to sound.

Of course if the buyout goes through we'll instantly see their revenue balloon either way.

Yeah, there is that. Saw a similar thing play out when Zenimax acquisition was officiated and their revenue got rolled into Xbox's.

But it's rather worrying if the only way a company can increase their gaming revenue is through buying up other gaming publishers and assimilating their revenue into their console division's. That ultimately is not a sustainable long-term growth option.
 

Three

Gold Member
It also doesn't say much about what contributions to revenue it accounted for, because there are so many ways to cheap out on the typical ARPU for Game Pass via $1 conversion deals, free trials, MS Reward points, etc.
I think everything reported is revenue so free trials and MS rewards wouldn't matter. It's not just subscriber numbers that's up. All we know is that an increase in gamepass revenue is slightly offsetting a bigger decline in content revenue to still result in an overall revenue decline in content and services.
 
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marjo

Member
Really disappointing results in all the gaming related aspects.
The sales failure of the super discounted Series S during the holiday season and the declining revenues in services (Gamepass) are especially concerning for them.
It's basically the whole "value" focused part of their strategy failing.
The other part is about boosting contents through acquisitions and here who knows how the whole Activision drama will end.

Game Pass revenue was up. Look at the slide in the OP.
 

Kacho

Gold Member
First Party decline was expected, but third party?
What major third party games dropped in Q4 besides the usual stuff? Callisto Protocol was a bomb. Midnight Suns and NFS likely underperformed. No big Ubisoft game like we usually get. Sales for Gotham Knights and Saints Row dropped off a cliff. Awful, awful year for third party software.
 
lol at some people in here discussing a 2 trillion dollar company like they’re on their death bed cause their smallest division was down. I mean it’s expected there was no first party release all year except smaller games like grounded and pentiment.
 

reksveks

Member
thought for FY 2023 Q2 they expected to stay relatively flat YoY? Did they revise that forecast?

From the October 25th call

https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/Investor/events/FY-2023/earnings-fy-2023-q1.aspx

In Windows OEM we expect revenue to decline in the high 30s. Excluding the impact from the Windows 11 revenue deferral last year, revenue would decline mid-30s reflecting both PC market demand and a strong prior year comparable, particularly in the commercial segment.

In Devices, revenue should decline approximately 30 percent, again roughly in line with the PC market.

In Windows commercial products and cloud services, customer demand for Microsoft 365 and our advanced security solutions should drive growth in the mid-single digits or low double digits in constant currency.

Search and news advertising ex-TAC should grow in the low-to-mid teens, roughly 6 points faster than overall Search and news advertising revenue, driven by growing first party revenue and the inclusion of Xandr.

And in Gaming, we expect revenue to decline in the low-to-mid teens against a strong prior year comparable that included several first-party title launches, partially offset by growth in Xbox Game Pass subscribers. We expect Xbox content and services revenue to decline in the low-to-mid-teens.
 
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Microsoft isn't charity, Xbox needs to perform.
This isn’t affecting them in the least bit some are just using this to push Microsoft get rid of Xbox agenda nothing more. The division was performing fine when they had software to release I’m sure it will recover as the year goes on when they’re putting out games. To act like it’s the end times is absurd.
 

chonga

Member
Game Pass revenue was up. Look at the slide in the OP.
Here is the problem. If you bring out a product that displaces another then you must at the very least replace the revenue you displace, and ultimately you aim really is to gain extra.

Additionally the benefit and idea of things like service titles and Game Pass is to avoid the peaks and troughs of figures from hit titles. Instead you're aiming for a more steady flow of cash.

We are still seeing ebbing and flowing and it is failing to displace lost revenues.

It is, so far, a failure.
 

GHG

Member
Xbox has never been a big performer for MS in 20 years. Out of all the key product lines and pillars, it's got to be the worst one out there compared to cloud, windows, MS Office, server stuff etc...

But it's still around.

This is the first time they are plugging significant investment into it. If it doesn't result in increased revenue then serious questions will be asked, both internally and from investors.

Reminder - this is the division that has been given the cash to execute the biggest acquisition in Microsoft's history.
 
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