Linked by Thom Holwerda on Fri 26th Oct 2007 15:31 UTC
Microsoft Strong sales of new and old products alike led Microsoft to its fastest first-quarter growth in eight years, with the company reporting growth in all five business segments and both revenue and earnings per share that beat analyst expectations. Revenue for the fiscal quarter ended Sept. 30 was up 27 percent at USD 13.76 billion compared to USD 10.81 billion a year ago, Microsoft said Thursday. Consensus estimates from Thomson First Call analysts were for the company to generate revenue of USD 12.57 billion. Microsoft's EPS for the quarter was USD 0.45, which also soundly beat Thomson First Call consensus estimate of USD 0.39. Net income for the quarter was USD 4.29 billion, a 23 percent increase over the USD 3.48 billion reported a year ago. At USD 5.92 billion, operating income for the quarter also had double-digit percentage growth: an increase of more than 25 percent over operating income reported for the same period last year of USD 4.47 billion.
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Many thanks ...
by agrouf on Fri 26th Oct 2007 16:49 UTC
agrouf
Member since:
2006-11-17

To all those who make that success possible.
Thank you for paying the Msft tax again and again. I'm sure share holders will make good use of your money.
This article is very interesting for share holders, but what dose it have to do with OS News?

RE: Many thanks ...
by Harald on Fri 26th Oct 2007 17:59 in reply to "Many thanks ..."
Harald Member since:
2006-03-10

To all those who make that success possible.
Thank you for paying the Msft tax again and again. I'm sure share holders will make good use of your money.


Everybody, especially shareholders of just about all tech issues on the NASDAQ, is thanking MS today.

Reply Parent Bookmark Score: 1

RE[2]: Many thanks ...
by gilboa on Sat 27th Oct 2007 08:50 in reply to "RE: Many thanks ..."
gilboa Member since:
2005-07-06

By the number of your posts here, I can only assume that either:
A. You work for Microsoft.
or:
B. You are a stock investor that has little (if any) interest in Operating Systems. (beyond MSFT stocks)

Never the less, let me ask you a simple question:
If I'm not a stock investor and I'm just a users - Should I be happy and why? Or, better yet, why should I even care?

- Gilboa
P.S. I'm giving you the benefit of the doubt that you are just happy about making a lot of money and not trolling; please treat me with the same curtsy.

Reply Parent Bookmark Score: 1