MICROSOFT'S CLOUD CONTINUES TO SEE SUNNY DAYS.

The tech giant’s cloud unit continues to grow as overall sales fall.
Investors seem unconcerned about Microsoft’s declining
revenue. As long as its cloud computing business shows progress, the
company’s future is sunny in their eyes.The technology giant said on Thursday that overall sales declined 10% in the latest quarter ending Dec. 31 to $23.8 billion. However, its 78 cents per share profit, excluding certain costs, handily beat analyst expectations of 71 cents per share, setting the positive tenor for the traditional call with analysts
Nearly every one of them expressed enthusiasm for Microsoft’s cloud business unit, a hodgepodge of different business-focused products including the Azure cloud computing platform, mobile device tracking services, and data analytics. That unit brought in $6.3 billion in sales during Microsoft’s second quarter, a 5% year over year increase and a 6.8% jump from the $5.9 billion it recorded in the previous quarter.
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Some analysts have previously questioned
Microsoft’s decision to lump all those products into one unit that it
calls the “intelligent cloud.” Some of those products, like its server
operating system, are older, but are now grouped with the newer and
hotter services in the cloud unit.However, Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella explained that the decision to create a bucket for cloud products makes sense because businesses typically want to buy a number of cloud products rather than just one. Additionally, some of these older products work in conjunction with the newer products and all contribute to a company’s total technology infrastructure.
“We don’t think of servers as a distinct part,” said Nadella. “But it’s the edge of our cloud,” a reference to how certain software and services can be interchangeable between a customer’s internal data center and the Microsoft cloud.
Microsoft and other tech giants like Hewlett Packard Enterprise HPE -1.49% are betting their future on this so-called “hybrid cloud” model, in which a company’s infrastructure is spread across its own data centers as well as the data centers of cloud computing providers like Microsoft and Amazon.
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