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Cloud limits Microsoft profit dip to 13.4%

Net profit in the quarter dipped to $ 4.5 billion from $5.2 billion in the same period a year ago, but topped most analyst forecasts. Revenue rose above $23 billion, its best ever for the fiscal first quarter.

The better-than-expected resulted pushed shares of the US technology titan up 3.8 per cent to $46.75 in after-market trades.

‘We are innovating faster, engaging more deeply across the industry, and putting our customers at the center of everything we do, all of which positions Microsoft for future growth,’ Microsoft chief executive Satya Nadella said in a release.

Microsoft said revenue hit a record high for its first fiscal quarter, aided by the popularity of its Xbox video game consoles and Surface tablet computers along with businesses turning to software offered as services in the Internet ‘cloud.’

‘Customers are embracing our latest technologies from Surface Pro 3 and Office 365 to (cloud-based) Azure and SQL Server’ for corporate customers, Microsoft chief operating officer Kevin Turner said. Revenue in Microsoft's Devices and Consumer unit grew 47 per cent to $10.96 billion, with the company bringing in nearly a billion dollars from sales of its Surface Pro 3 tablet computer.

Xbox sales more than doubled to 2.4 million in the quarter, which saw the newest version of the console release in 28 new markets. Revenue was up 10 percent when it came to commercial offerings, with cloud services such as Office 365 and Azure growing 128 per cent.

At a press briefing in San Francisco this week, Nadella detailed the latest moves in Microsoft's strategy to entice businesses with the ability to tap into the power of colossal online data centers as needed. Microsoft's event spotlighted how the company is playing on its strengths with software used by businesses to capitalise on a trend toward renting computing power, storage, or software as services hosted at data-centers in the Internet cloud.
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