Alex Castro / The Verge
Itâs a new financial year for Microsoft, and the Windows and Xbox maker has just posted the first quarter of its 2023 financial results today. Microsoft made $50.1 billion in revenue and a net income of $17.6 billion during Q1. Revenue is up 11 percent but net income has decreased by 14 percent â meaning profits are down at Microsoft this quarter.
While there were signs of PC declines earlier this year, itâs clear this quarter that the PC is very much in decline, and that has impacted Microsoftâs Windows results. PC shipments experienced another big decline in the recent quarter â 15 percent, according to IDC. Geopolitical tensions, inflation, and continued supply chain challenges are all contributing to PC sales issues, alongside softer demand.
Photo by Amelia Holowaty Krales / The Verge
The Surface Pro 9 launched today.
Microsoftâs Windows OEM revenue, the price PC manufacturers pay Microsoft to put Windows on machines, fell 15 percent in Q1, driven by what Microsoft describes as a âcontinued deterioration in the PC market.â
Despite the challenges, IDC says shipment volumes âremain well above pre-pandemic levels,â so itâs not all doom and gloom for Windows and PCs just yet.
Microsoftâs Surface devices are still doing well, too. While there werenât any big new Surface launches in Q1, Surface revenue is up by 2 percent. Microsoft now declares this as âdevices revenue,â rather than just Surface, as it now includes revenue from HoloLens and PC accessories. Microsoft just recently announced new Surface Pro 9, Surface Laptop 5, and Surface Studio 2 Plus devices, which will likely renew interest in Surface for Microsoftâs fiscal Q2 2023.
Photo by Tom Warren / The Verge
Microsoftâs Xbox Series S and X hardware.
Microsoftâs other hardware, Xbox, is up this quarter. Hardware revenue increased by 13 percent alongside a 3 percent dip in Xbox content and services revenue. Microsoft says this was driven by âdeclines in first-party content and in third-party content, with lower engagement hours and higher monetization, particularly offset by growth in Xbox Game Pass subscriptions.â Overall, gaming revenue at Microsoft âgrew slightlyâ year over year.
Microsoft once again hasnât provided an update on Xbox Game Pass subscribers this quarter after the service grew to 25 million in January following the holiday releases of Age of Empires IV, Forza Horizon 5, and Halo Infinite.
All eyes are now on Microsoftâs planned $68.7 billion acquisition of Activision Blizzard that it intends to close in its fiscal 2023 year. While regulators in Brazil and Saudi Arabia have approved the deal, Microsoft is battling UK regulators and Sony over Call of Duty, Xbox Game Pass, and much more.
The European Commission has started reviewing Microsoftâs Activision deal and has set a November 8th provisional deadline. Microsoft isnât sharing anything more on the deal and said last month that itâs âprogressing in line with the expected regulatory schedule and process, and we remain confident that the acquisition will close in fiscal year 2023.â
Image: Microsoft
Microsoft Office is becoming Microsoft 365 soon.
Microsoft Office, cloud, and server products are always the big revenue drivers these days, and nothing has changed here for Q1. Microsoft highlighted cloud revenue as the big driver of this quarterâs earnings, with Microsoft cloud hitting $25.7 billion in revenue, up 24 percent year over year. Office commercial and consumer product divisions were both up 7 percent, helping push Microsoftâs productivity business to $16.5 billion in revenue.
Microsoft 365 consumer subscriptions have also grown again this quarter, up 13 percent to 61.3 million. Microsoft continues to promote its subscription offerings in Windows and on new laptops that are shipped by third-party OEMs. Microsoft Office will soon become Microsoft 365 in a major brand overhaul, so that will likely help drive growth around the companyâs Office-based subscriptions.
Other surprises in Microsoftâs latest quarter are LinkedIn revenue up 17 percent year over year, and search and news advertising revenues up 16 percent. LinkedIn grew thanks to strength in the talent solutions side of the business, and the search and advertising bump was âdriven by higher search volume and Xandr.â
Microsoft will now hold an investors call at 5:30PM ET / 2:30PM PT, and weâll be sure to update this article with any relevant information.