Microsoft Confirms That China, Russia Battered Its Earnings
- By The Financial District

- Jul 29, 2022
- 2 min read
Microsoft's business is taking a hit from events on the other side of the world. The tech giant attributed lower-than-expected earnings to developments in China and Russia, including the former's extended COVID lockdowns and the latter's war against Ukraine, Rishi Iyengar reported for CNN Business.

Photo Insert: Microsoft stock dipped around 1% lower in after-hours trading.
Microsoft recorded $51.9 billion in revenue and $16.7 billion in profit, up 12% and 2%, respectively, from the same period last year but lower than forecasts from analysts surveyed by Refinitiv.
"Extended production shutdowns in China" resulted in a $300 million hit, the company said in its earnings release, adding that it spent $126 million to "significantly scale down" its operations in Russia because of the war in Ukraine.
There were also more universal issues, however. Microsoft's jobs platform LinkedIn suffered from a reduction in advertising spend, along with Microsoft's search and news business, which resulted in a revenue decline of over $100 million.
Amid the broader tech industry downturn, Microsoft said it undertook a "a strategic realignment" of its business that resulted in $113 million spent on employee severance (excluding Russia).
Microsoft stock dipped around 1% lower in after-hours trading. There were some bright spots, however — foremost among them Microsoft's cloud business. The company's cloud revenue for the quarter was $25 billion, a 28% increase from the same quarter last year.
"In a dynamic environment we saw strong demand, took share, and increased customer commitment to our cloud platform," Microsoft's executive vice president and chief financial officer Amy Hood said in a statement. Haris Anwar, a senior analyst at Investing.com, said the cloud growth reflected Microsoft's continued durability.
"Today's results are very much reflecting the impact of a challenging economic environment which is hurting almost every mega tech company," he said in a statement.
But the strong cloud performance indicates that "large and small companies continue to spend on their IT infrastructure, a trend which will continue to support Microsoft even if the economy slips into a recession," he added.
![TFD [LOGO] (10).png](https://static.wixstatic.com/media/bea252_c1775b2fb69c4411abe5f0d27e15b130~mv2.png/v1/crop/x_150,y_143,w_1221,h_1193/fill/w_179,h_176,al_c,q_85,usm_0.66_1.00_0.01,enc_avif,quality_auto/TFD%20%5BLOGO%5D%20(10).png)











