Microsoft's quarterly sales and profit surge, beating Wall Street expectations

Microsoft Windows
Photo credit AP News/Thibault Camus

REDMOND, Wash. (AP) — Microsoft on Wednesday reported its quarterly sales grew 18% to $77.7 billion.

The software maker also reported a 22% increase in quarterly profit to $30.8 billion, or $4.13 per share, which beat Wall Street expectations for the July-September period. Microsoft said those results excluded the impacts of some $3 billion it invested in OpenAI during that period, in an attempt to “help clarify” how those losses affected Microsoft's core business.

Microsoft was expected to earn $3.67 per share on revenue of $75.38 billion, according to analysts surveyed by FactSet Research.

The results came a day after a new deal with OpenAI pushed Microsoft to $4 trillion in valuation for the second time this year. But shares in Microsoft then dropped in the hours before it disclosed its earnings Wednesday as the company battled an outage affecting its Azure cloud computing platform.

Driving investor enthusiasm on Tuesday was the announcement of Microsoft's revised business deal with its longtime partner OpenAI, maker of ChatGPT and now the world's most valuable startup. While no longer OpenAI's exclusive cloud provider, a relationship that helped bankroll the startup's early growth, Microsoft will retain commercial rights to OpenAI products through 2032 and get a roughly 27% stake in OpenAI’s new for-profit arm.

Microsoft’s valuation previously passed $4 trillion in July, making it the second company after Nvidia to reach the milestone. Microsoft again and Apple for the first time crossed $4 trillion this week, while Nvidia went on to achieve a different milestone: the first $5 trillion company.

The sky-high valuations highlight the investor frenzy around artificial intelligence, which some fear could turn into a bust if AI products aren't as transformative or profitable as promised.

Microsoft's recent focus has centered around pitching its flagship AI assistant Copilot to help with a variety of work tasks, and last week gave it a new animated avatar exterior called Mico.

Featured Image Photo Credit: AP News/Thibault Camus