Amy Hood
Analyst · Morgan Stanley
Thank you, Satya, and good afternoon, everyone. We delivered results that exceeded expectations across revenue, operating income and earnings per share, driven by strong demand and execution. As Satya shared, our AI business annual revenue run rate surpassed $37 billion this quarter, growing 123% year-over-year. And we're accelerating our pace of innovation as we execute against the expansive opportunity ahead. This quarter, revenue was $82.9 billion, up 18% and 15% in constant currency. Gross margin dollars increased 16% and 13% in constant currency, while operating income increased 20% and 16% in constant currency. Earnings per share was $4.27, an increase of 21% and 18% in constant currency when adjusted for the impact from our investment in OpenAI. And FX was roughly in line with guidance at the total company level. Company gross margin percentage was 68% down year-over-year, driven by continued investment in AI infrastructure and growing AI product usage. The impact from these investments was partially offset by ongoing efficiency gains, particularly in Azure and M365 Commercial Cloud. Operating expenses increased 9% and 8% in constant currency, driven by continued investment in AI including R&D compute capacity, talent and data to support product development across the portfolio. This quarter, growth was impacted by a low prior year comparable, particularly in sales and marketing and G&A expenses. Operating margins increased slightly year-over-year to 46%. Total company headcount declined year-over-year as we focus on building high-performing teams that operate with pace and agility. When adjusted for the impact from our investments in OpenAI, other income and expense was $961 million. Favorability was driven by gains on investments that were partially offset by losses on foreign currency remeasurement. Capital expenditures were $31.9 billion, down sequentially due to the normal variability from structure buildouts and the timing of delivery of finance leases. And this quarter, roughly 2/3 of our CapEx was for short-lived assets, primarily GPUs and CPUs. The remaining spend was for long-lived assets that will support monetization over the next 15 years and beyond. This quarter, total finance leases were $4.7 billion and were primarily for large data center sites. And cash paid for PP&E was $30.9 billion, roughly in line with capital expenditures as the impact from finance leases was partially offset by differences between the receipt of goods and payment. Cash flow from operations was $46.7 billion, up 26%, driven by strong cloud billings and collections, partially offset by an increase in operating lease payments. And free cash flow was $15.8 billion, reflecting higher capital expenditures. And finally, we returned $10.2 billion to shareholders through dividends and share repurchases. Now to our commercial results. Commercial bookings grew 7% when excluding the impact from OpenAI, driven by consistent execution in our core annuity sales motions. Bookings decreased 4% and 6% in constant currency when including Azure commitments from OpenAI. Commercial remaining performance obligation grew 26%, in line with historic seasonality when excluding OpenAI. RPO increased to $627 billion and was up 99% year-over-year with a weighted average duration of approximately 2.5 years when including OpenAI. Roughly 25% will be recognized in revenue in the next 12 months, up 39% year-over-year. The remaining portion recognized beyond the next 12 months increased 138%. Microsoft Cloud revenue was $54.5 billion and grew 29% and 25% in constant currency, reflecting strong demand across the Azure platform and our first-party AI applications and services. Microsoft Cloud gross margin percentage was slightly better than expected at 66% and down year-over-year due to continued investments in AI, partially offset by the ongoing efficiency gains noted earlier. Now to our segment results. Revenue from Productivity and Business Processes was $35 billion and grew 17% and 13% in constant currency. M365 Commercial Cloud revenue increased 19% and 15% in constant currency, ahead of expectations, strong execution and improving product quality drove accelerating M365 Copilot seat adds this quarter, with paid seats now over 20 million. ARPU growth was again led by both E5 and M365 Copilot. And paid M365 Commercial seats grew 6% year-over-year with installed base expansion across all customer segments, though primarily in our small and medium business and frontline worker offerings. M365 Commercial products revenue increased 1% and decreased 3% in constant currency, down sequentially as Office 2024 transactional purchasing trends continue to normalize as expected. M365 Consumer Cloud revenue increased 33% and 29% in constant currency, again driven by ARPU growth. M365 consumer subscriptions grew 7%. LinkedIn revenue increased 12% and 9% in constant currency, with growth across all lines of business. Dynamics 365 revenue increased 22% and 17% in constant currency with continued share gains and growth across all workloads. Bookings growth was impacted by weaker renewals as customers balance spend between the traditional per seat and the emerging seats consumption model. Segment gross margin dollars increased 18% and 13% in constant currency, and gross margin percentage increased slightly, again, driven by efficiency gains in M365 Commercial Cloud that were partially offset by continued investments in AI, including the impact of growing adoption and usage of Copilot. [ I guess ] the low prior year comparable, operating expenses increased 11% and 9% in constant currency, driven by the shared R&D AI investments mentioned earlier as well as higher co-pilot advertising spend. Operating income increased 21% and 14% in constant currency, and operating margins increased year-over-year to 60%. Next, the Intelligent Cloud segment. Revenue was $34.7 billion and grew 30% and 28% in constant currency. In Azure and other Cloud Services, revenue grew 40% and 39% in constant currency against a prior year that included accelerating growth. Results were ahead of expectations as we delivered capacity earlier in the quarter, enabling increased consumption across both AI and non-AI services. Strong customer demand across workloads, customer segments and geographic regions continues to exceed available capacity. In our on-premises server business, revenue increased slightly and decreased 3% in constant currency with ongoing customer shift to cloud offerings. Segment gross margin dollars increased 19% and 18% in constant currency. Gross margin percentage decreased year-over-year driven by continued AI investment and increased GitHub Copilot usage, partially offset by ongoing efficiency gains in Azure. Operating expenses increased 9% and 7% in constant currency, driven by the shared R&D AI investment noted earlier. Operating income grew 24% and 23% in constant currency, and operating margins were 40%. Now to More Personal Computing. Revenue was $13.2 billion and declined 1% and 3% in constant currency. Windows OEM and Devices revenue decreased 2% and 3% in constant currency. Windows OEM increased slightly and was ahead of expectations as OEM and channel partners continued to build inventory given increasing memory prices. Search advertising revenue ex TAC increased 12% and 9% in constant currency, was both driven by higher volume and revenue per search across edge and. And in gaming, revenue decreased 7% and 9% in constant currency. Xbox content and services revenue decreased 5% and 7% in constant currency against the prior year comparable that benefited from strong first-party content performance. Segment gross margin dollars increased 6% and 4% in constant currency and gross margin percentage increased year-over-year driven by sales mix shift to higher-margin businesses. [ I guess ] the low prior year comparable, operating expenses increased 7% and 6% in constant currency driven by impairment and other related expenses in our gaming business as well as continued investments in shared R&D mentioned earlier that benefits the entire portfolio. Operating income increased 4% and 1% in constant currency, and operating margins increased year-over-year to 28%. Now moving to our Q4 outlook, which unless specifically noted otherwise, is on a U.S. dollar basis. Based on current rates, we expect FX to increase revenue growth by roughly 1 point in Productivity and Business Processes and More Personal Computing with no meaningful impact to Intelligent Cloud. Overall impact to total revenue is expected to be less than 1 point. And FX should increase COGS growth by roughly 1 point with no impact to operating expense growth. Starting with our commercial business. In commercial bookings, when adjusted for the impact from OpenAI, we expect healthy growth on a growing expiry base with consistent execution in our core annuity sales motions against a significant prior year comparable. Microsoft Cloud gross margin percentage should be roughly 64%, down year-over-year, driven by continued investments in AI and increased GitHub Copilot usage. Just this week, we announced a business model transition in GitHub Copilot that will align pricing with usage and value that takes effect on June 1 of this year. Now to segment guidance. In Productivity and Business Processes, we expect revenue of USD 37 billion to USD 37.3 billion, a growth of 12% to 13%. In M365 Commercial Cloud, on an adjusted basis, we expect revenue growth to be between 15% and 16% in constant currency. When normalized for the prior year comparable that benefited from 2 points of in-period revenue recognition. And on a reported basis, we expect revenue growth to be between 13% and 14% in constant currency. Building on the Copilot momentum we saw in Q3, we expect net paid seat adds to increase sequentially, which will drive continued ARPU growth. M365 Commercial products revenue should grow in the mid-single digits against the prior year that benefited from higher-than-expected Office 2024 transactional purchasing. As a reminder, M365 Commercial products includes components that can be variable due to in-period revenue recognition dynamics. M365 Consumer Cloud revenue growth should be in the low 20% range, down sequentially as we start to lap the benefit from last year's price increase. Growth will again be driven by ARPU and an increase in subscription volume. For LinkedIn, we expect revenue growth of approximately 10%. And in Dynamics 365, we expect revenue growth to be in the low double digits, down sequentially with impact from a strong prior year comparable and the bookings trends noted earlier. For Intelligent Cloud, we expect revenue of USD 37.95 billion to USD 38.25 billion or growth of 27% to 28%. In Azure, we continue to focus on accelerating the delivery of capacity and increasing fleet efficiencies, and therefore, we expect Q4 revenue growth to be between 39% and 40% in constant currency against a strong prior year comparable that included accelerating growth. Broad and growing customer demand continues to exceed supply, and we continue to balance the incoming supply we can allocate here against our other high ROI priorities, first-party applications, R&D and end-of-life server replacement. As a reminder, year-over-year Azure growth rates can vary quarter-to-quarter based on capacity, timing and contract mix. In our on-premise server business, we expect revenue to decline in the mid-single digits with ongoing customer shift to cloud offerings. In More Personal Computing, we are lapping strong prior year comparables, navigating complex PC market dynamics impacted by memory prices and refocusing on delivering quality and value to consumers. Therefore, we expect revenue to be USD 11.75 billion to USD 12.25 billion. Windows OEM revenue should decline in the high teens with roughly 6 points of impact from a prior year comparable that benefited from Windows 10 end of support, 6 points from inventory levels that we expect to come down for the quarter and 6 points from a lower PC market as prices increase due to memory cost. The range of potential outcomes remains wider than normal. Therefore, Windows OEM and Devices revenue should decline in the mid- to high teens. Search advertising revenue ex TAC growth should be in the high single digits, driven by revenue per search and volume with continued share gains across Bing and Edge. And in Xbox content and services, we expect revenue to decline in the low teens, reflecting a prior year comparable that benefited from strong first-party content as well as the recent price changes for Xbox Game Pass as we focus on delivering more value to gamers. Hardware revenue should decline year-over-year. Therefore, at the total company level, revenue should be between USD 86.7 billion and USD 87.8 billion or growth of 13% to 15%, with accelerating commercial growth, partially offset by our consumer business. Our Q4 outlook for COGS and operating expenses includes roughly $900 million in onetime costs for the recently announced voluntary retirement program. Therefore, we expect COGS of USD 29.4 billion to USD 29.6 billion or growth of 22% to 23%, including roughly $350 million from the retirement program. And operating expense of USD 19.3 billion to USD 19.4 billion or growth of approximately 7%, including roughly $550 million from the retirement program. Even as we invested through the year, [ and ] additional capacity to serve the growing AI platform, apps and services demand and inclusive of these onetime costs, we expect full year FY '26 operating margins to be up about 1 point year-over-year. Excluding any impact from our investments in OpenAI, other income and expense is expected to be roughly negative $100 million as interest income will be more than offset by interest expense, which includes the interest payments related to data center, finance leases. And we expect our adjusted Q4 effective tax rate to be approximately 19%. Next, capital expenditures. We expect CapEx spend to increase to over $40 billion as we continue to bring more capacity online. The sequential increase includes roughly $5 billion from higher component pricing as well as the impact from finance leases, which add variability given the full value is recorded in the period of lease commencement. And we expect the mix of short-lived assets to remain similar to Q3. For calendar year 2026, we expect to invest roughly $190 billion in capital expenditures, which includes approximately $25 billion from the impact of higher component pricing. We remain confident in the return on these investments, given higher demand signals and increasing product usage as well as the efficiencies we're already driving across the platform. Even with these additional investments and continued efforts to bring GPU, CPU and storage capacity online faster, we expect to remain constrained at least through 2026. Despite these constraints, and the continued need to balance incoming supply. We expect Azure growth to show modest acceleration in the second half of the calendar year compared with the first half. Now I'd like to share some closing thoughts as we look to next fiscal year. First, we continue to evolve how we operate to increase our pace and agility. And therefore, we expect headcount will decrease year-over-year. Operating expense growth will be in the mid- to high single digits, reflecting ongoing investments in R&D, inclusive of AI investment in compute, data and talent to accelerate product innovation. Next, as a reminder, we will lap strong prior year comparables impacted by Windows 10 end of support, elevated OEM inventory levels as well as increased office and server transactional purchasing. And finally, we remain focused on delivering a platform that enables customers to build and run AI solutions and on driving innovation in our first-party AI applications and services. And therefore, we expect another year of double-digit revenue and operating income growth in FY '27. In closing, we are committed to delivering innovation that helps customers create new business value as we enter the final quarter of our fiscal year. With that, let's go to Q&A, Jonathan.