Microsoft has the bit between its teeth while Amazon flounders.
- Microsoft and Amazon reported results on 23rd October leaving me in no doubt that a strong preference for Microsoft over Amazon is the right way to go.
Microsoft Q1 15A
- Microsoft reported excellent results with Q1 15A revenues and EPS of $23.2bn / $0.54 compared to consensus at $22.0bn / $0.48.
- The combination of the stability in the PC market and hardware shipments being ahead of expectations, underpinned the outperformance.
- Cloud, Office 365, Surface and Lumia all had an excellent quarter and this is expected to continue into fiscal Q2 15E.
- Phone hardware is expected to decline this quarter but this is more due to the rationalisation of the non-smartphone business which I am expecting to be wound down over the next few quarters.
- This performance is also gratifying as it comes in the midst of the biggest shakeup Microsoft has been through in the last 20 years.
- Focus has not been lost and I am comfortable that the businesses should continue to perform despite the internal upheaval.
- The key now is to bring all of the disparate pieces of the Microsoft ecosystem together.
- When they are all integrated and they all know about each other, then Microsoft can offer a full and complete offering for both Digital Life and Digital Work.
- This is the panacea that will return Microsoft to steady growth but there still remains a mountain to climb.
- In the meantime the fundamentals are steady and the stock looks likely to continue its steady performance.
Amazon Q3 14A
- Amazon reported bad Q3 14A results as growth continues to come at the expense of profitability.
- Q3 14A revenues and EPS were $20.6bn and LOSS$0.95 compared to consensus at $20.9bn and LOSS$0.75.
- Included in the figures was a $170m write-down of unsold Fire phone inventory.
- This looks like a $200 write off per device implying that Amazon had made commitments for somewhere around 1m units.
- It looks like Amazon has shipped something in the region of 35,000 devices to date.
- This comes as no surprise (see here) and I continue to believe that Amazon is conducting an expensive series of random experiments rather than having a real strategy to build an ecosystem.
- Guidance for Q4 14E was also very disappointing with revenues of $27.3bn-$30.3bn expected and net loss of $570m to a net profit of $470m is expected.
- This compares unfavourably to forecasts of $30.9bn and a net profit of $461m.
- Erratic ecosystem strategy aside, the fundamental problem with Amazon is that it makes no money.
- Investors have been waiting a long time for scale to start working in its favour and for the company to start earning some money but it never seems to happen.
- Worst of all, at 126x 2014E PER and 69.4x 2015E PER the shares are already pricing in improvements that never seem to materialise.
- The correct valuation for a company that will never make a net profit for shareholders is 1x book value.
- In Amazon’s case this is $10.3bn which is far below the current market capitalisation of $146bn.
- It is an extreme statement to say that Amazon will never make any money for shareholders but it is clear that until it does, one should steer clear.
- Google, Microsoft and Apple are far better places to be.
Blog Comments
Tatilsever
October 25, 2014 at 12:46 am
> “Cloud, Office 365, Surface and Lumia all had an excellent quarter”
Umm, Surface sales indicate less than a million tablets, very low gross margins and an overall loss once fixed costs are included. Lumia’s ASP is calculated to be about $110 (or maybe a little higher if dumb phone business is winding down faster.) Neither is good, let alone excellent.
windsorr
October 27, 2014 at 10:14 am
Everything is about relative to expectations. The term excellent is in itslef a relative description. Relative to what was expected, these businesses all had an excellent quarter.
Tatilsever
October 27, 2014 at 10:48 pm
I agree with the rest of your post, but the definition of “excellent” cannot be “lousy, but it could be even worse”. There is already a phrase for that: “better than expected”.
Tatilsever
October 25, 2014 at 12:51 am
>”Worst of all, at 126x 2014E PER and 69.4x 2015E PER the shares are already pricing in improvements that never seem to materialise.”
Reuters say 2015E P/E is 150 and earning estimates for next year may yet be reduced.
windsorr
October 27, 2014 at 10:14 am
even worse. I am using Bloomberg consensus.