True Blue Chips pay off

Learn everything you need to know in 'The Best Blue Chips for Canadian Investors' for FREE from The Successful Investor.

Canadian Blue Chip Stocks: Bank of Nova Scotia Stock, CP Rail Stock, CAE Inc. Stock and more.

 I consent to receiving information from The Successful Investor via email. I understand I can unsubscribe from these updates at any time.

Topic: Blue Chip Stocks

Microsoft Corp. remains a buy

Improved sales of Windows-related software and hardware plus cloud-computing services led to a 22.4% jump in earnings per share.

The company’s strong balance sheet supports the continued development of new products and services to complement its existing cash flow generators.

The stock trades at 26.7 times the company’s 2020 earnings forecast.

True Blue Chips pay off

Learn everything you need to know in 'The Best Blue Chips for Canadian Investors' for FREE from The Successful Investor.

Canadian Blue Chip Stocks: Bank of Nova Scotia Stock, CP Rail Stock, CAE Inc. Stock and more.

 I consent to receiving information from The Successful Investor via email. I understand I can unsubscribe from these updates at any time.

MICROSOFT CORP. (Nasdaq symbol MSFT; www.microsoft.com) began operating in 1975 and is now the world’s largest computer software company.

Its Windows operating system powers about 80% of the world’s personal computers. Microsoft’s other main product—its Office suite, which includes a word processor (Word), spreadsheets (Excel) and slide presentations (PowerPoint)—controls over half of its market.

The company plans to launch the next version of its popular Xbox video game console in late 2020.

The new model will be four times more powerful than the current Xbox One X console. The company is also planning to launch a new online streaming service that will let users play games on their consoles as well as smartphones, tablets and personal computers.

Microsoft includes Xbox as part of its More Personal Computing division (mainly revenue from its Windows operating system); that division accounted for 35% of its revenue in the quarter ended March 31, 2019. Xbox gaming revenue rose 5% in that quarter from a year earlier.

Blue Chip Stocks: 15 years of dividends from global revenues

Microsoft began paying regular dividends in 2004 and has increased that rate each year since 2010. With the December 2018 payment, it increased its quarterly dividend by 9.5%, to $0.46 a share from $0.42. The new annual rate of $1.84 yields 1.5%.

The company continues to benefit from its 2014 decision to focus on cloud-computing services. Its main cloud service is Microsoft Azure, which lets individuals and businesses manage databases as well as store and back up their files. Users can run Azure on a wide variety of devices, including smartphones and tablets.

Microsoft gets just over half of its revenue from customers outside of the U.S., and the higher U.S. dollar cut its revenue by 2.6%, from $93.58 billion in 2015 to $91.15 billion in 2016 (fiscal years end June 30). However, revenue rebounded 5.9%, to $96.57 billion in 2017, and rose a further 14.3% to $110.36 billion in 2018. In fiscal 2019, Microsoft’s revenue gained 14.0%, to $125.84 billion.

The company’s overall earnings jumped 109.0%, from $12.19 billion in 2015 to $25.49 billion in 2017. On a per-share basis, earnings increased 119.6%, from $1.48 to $3.25, on fewer shares outstanding. A charge related to the U.S. tax reforms cut Microsoft’s earnings to $2.13 a share (or a total of $16.57 billion) in 2018. Earnings then recovered to $5.06 a share (or $39.24 billion) in 2019. If you exclude all unusual items, earnings per share rose 22.4%, from $3.88 in 2018 to $4.75 in 2019.

Microsoft’s research costs rose 14.6% in fiscal 2019, to $16.88 billion (or 13.4% of its revenue) from $14.73 billion (13.3%) a year earlier. Part of that spending is going toward adding artificial intelligence (AI) features to its Azure services. AI should make it easier for Azure to recognize images and understand spoken languages, which should speed up its overall performance. Those improvements will help Azure compete with cloud services from Amazon.com and Google.

The company’s strong balance sheet will continue to support the development of new products, as well as higher dividends. As of June 30, 2019, it held cash of $133.8 billion, or $17.51 a share. Its long-term debt of $66.7 billion is a low 6% of its market cap.

Microsoft is also an active buyer of its own shares. It still has $11.4 billion remaining under its current buyback authorization. There are no time limits for those share purchases.

The company’s shares trade at 26.7 times the $5.23 a share it should earn in fiscal 2020. That’s a reasonable multiple in light of its fast-growing cloud business.

Recommendation in Dividend Advisor: Microsoft Corp. is a buy.

Comments

Tell Us What YOU Think

You must be logged in to post a comment.

Please be respectful with your comments and help us keep this an area that everyone can enjoy. If you believe a comment is abusive or otherwise violates our Terms of Use, please click here to report it to the administrator.