Microsoft set to record a dip in revenue

October 25, 2022

Microsoft is on track to report its slowest quarterly revenue growth in more than five years, owing to a slowing PC market that has forced consumers and businesses to cut back on spending on computers and laptops, a strong dollar, rising inflation and a global economic slowdown.

To make matters worse, the dollar has risen by more than 17%, squeezing earnings of companies with large global operations.

According to Refinitiv, Microsoft’s revenue is expected to rise 9.5% in the first quarter to $49.61 billion, the first increase below 10% since the third quarter of fiscal 2017. Earnings per share are expected to be $2.30.

PC shipment fell 19.5% in the third quarter of this year, indicating a slowdown in cloud adoption. Piper Sandler predicts total revenue for the 100 largest software companies will grow by 22% in 2022 and 20% in 2023, down from 33% in 2021. This will affect not only Microsoft, but also other software companies. Software companies are the largest users of cloud platforms, and their growth is used as a proxy for the cloud services sector.

Windows licenses account for about 12% to 13% of Microsoft’s revenue, with the decline in the PC market expected to reduce revenue by 100 basis points. Microsoft’s cloud services unit Azure is expected to grow by 20% in the first quarter, slightly offsetting the setback, according to Refinitiv data.

The sources for this piece include an article in Reuters.

Top Stories

Related Articles

January 8, 2026 Finnish eyewear startup IXI says it is preparing to launch smart glasses that automatically adjust focus in more...

January 8, 2026 D-Wave says it has solved a major technical bottleneck that has long limited the scalability of gate-model more...

January 7, 2026 CES 2026 kicked off with a bang on Jan. 6. It’s been two days of the four-day more...

January 7, 2026 Universal Music Group (UMG) has teamed up with NVIDIA to integrate AI into the music experience. This more...

Jim Love

Jim is an author and podcast host with over 40 years in technology.

Share:
Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn