Jul 27, 2021

Microsoft (MSFT) Q4 2021 Earnings Call Transcript

Microsoft MSFT Q4 2020 Earnings
RevBlogTranscriptsEarnings Call TranscriptsMicrosoft (MSFT) Q4 2021 Earnings Call Transcript

Microsoft (MSFT) reported Q4 2021 earnings on July 27, 2021. Read the full earnings call transcript here.

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Speaker 1: (00:01)
Greetings, and welcome to the Microsoft fiscal year 2021 fourth quarter earnings conference call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. A question and answer session will follow the formal presentation. If anyone should require operator assistance during the conference, please press star zero on your telephone keypad. As a reminder, this conference is being recorded. It is now my pleasure to introduce your host, [Brett Iverson 00:00:24], general manager of investor relations. Thank you. You may begin.

Brett Iverson: (00:30)
Good afternoon, and thank you for joining us today. On the call with me are Satya Nadella, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, Amy Hood, Chief Financial Officer, Alice Jolla, Chief Accounting Officer, and Keith Oliver, Deputy General Counsel. On the Microsoft investor relations website, you can find our earnings press release and financial summary slide deck, which is intended to supplement our prepared remarks during today’s call and provides the reconciliation of differences between GAAP and non-GAAP financial measures. Unless otherwise specified. We will referred to the non-GAAP metrics on the call. The non-GAAP financial measures provided should not be considered as a substitute for or superior to the measures of financial performance prepared in accordance with GAAP. They’re included as additional clarifying items to aid investors in further understanding the company’s fourth quarter performance in addition to the impact these items and events have on the financial results. All growth comparisons we make on the call today relate to the corresponding period of last year, unless otherwise noted.

Brett Iverson: (01:35)
We will also provide growth rates in constant currency when available as a framework for assessing how our underlying businesses performed, excluding the effect of foreign currency rate fluctuations. Where the growth rates are the same in constant currency, we will refer to the growth rate only. We will post our prepared remarks to or website immediately following the call until the complete transcript is available. Today’s call is being webcast live and recorded. If you ask a question, it will be included in our live transmission, in the transcript, and in any future use of the recording. You can replay the call and view the transcript on the Microsoft industrial relations website.

Brett Iverson: (02:15)
During this call, we will make forward-looking statements, which are predictions, projections, or other statements about future events. These statements are based on current expectations and assumptions that are subject to risks and uncertainties. Actual results could materially differ because of factors discussed in today’s earnings press release, in the comments made during this conference call, and in the risk factor section of our form 10K, forms 10Q, and other reports on filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission. We do not undertake any duty to update any forward-looking statement. And with that, I’ll turn the call over to Satya.

Satya: (02:53)
Thanks so much, Brett. We had a very strong close to our fiscal year. Our commercial clouds surpassed $69 billion in annual revenue, up 34%. We are seeing revenue growth across industries, customer segments, and geographies with over 50% of sales coming from outside the United States. We continue to grow new franchises for Microsoft in large and growing markets. In the past three years alone, gaming, security, and now, LinkedIn have all surpassed $10 billion in annual revenue.

Satya: (03:33)
Now, I’ll highlight our innovation and our expanding opportunity across the tech stack, starting with infrastructure. Moving forward, every organization will need more ubiquitous and decentralized computing. We’re the only cloud provider with the capabilities to support every organization’s multi-cloud hybrid and Edge needs. Over the past year, we have added new data center regions in 15 countries across five continents, delivering faster access to cloud services and addressing data residency requirements. And now, we’re taking cloud compute to the edge with 5G deployments. Our new Azure Edge services help operators and enterprises deliver ultra low latency compute fabric.

Satya: (04:22)
And we’re also helping operators run their networks in the cloud. AT&T chose Azure to power its 5G core network, making it the first tier one operator to move its existing customer traffic to the public cloud. We’re also expanding our opportunity in hybrid. Today, over 75% of the Fortune 500 use our hybrid offerings. Azure Arc extends the Azure control plane across on-premise, multi-cloud, and the Edge. With Arc, customers like [Ewa 00:04:54] and Telstra can manage their Kubernetes deployments anywhere, and deploy Azure SQL databases, and run Azure application services on any infrastructure.

Satya: (05:05)
As the digital and physical worlds converge, we are leading in a new layer of the infrastructure stack, the enterprise metawares. AB InBev is using our solutions, including Azure Digital Twins and Azure IoT to optimize operations from the [inaudible 00:05:23] field, to the warehouse, to distribution. Customers also continue to choose our infrastructure to run mission-critical SAP solutions. Thousands of enterprises have migrated their ERP workloads to Azure, including Campbell’s Soup, L’Oreal, Mondelez International, ServiceNow, and even SAP. All this innovation is driving larger and more strategic Azure commitments from industry leaders, including [Moss 00:05:51] and Consumer Goods, Morgan Stanley in financial services, and NEC in IT.

Satya: (05:57)
Now, onto data. Data is the most strategic asset for every business. We’re the only cloud provider that helps organizations build sovereignty over their data by bringing together hyperscale OLTP, analytics, and governance workloads. Cosmos DB has become the go-to database, powering the world’s most demanding mission-critical workloads. New capabilities help organizations like Albertsons, ASOS, DHL, LaLiga, [inaudible 00:06:28] optimize costs and boost performance. Walmart is using Cosmos DB to handle billions of online requests daily and to ensure millions of customers receive the items they want when they need them. Azure Synapse brings together data integration, big data, and data warehouses into a single service. From ABN AMRO in finance, and AmerisourceBergen in pharma, to Walgreens in retail, and WPP in advertising, organizations are using Synapse to generate insights from massive amounts of structured and unstructured data. Queries performed using Synapse increased 146% over the last quarter alone.

Satya: (07:11)
Now, on to developers. GitHub is used by 72% of the Fortune 50 to build, ship, and maintain software. Organizations like Ford, NASA, and Shopify are using new project planning capabilities to help developers better manage projects directly within their workflow. And Epic Games, Motorola Solutions, and Volkswagen Software Group all chose GitHub advanced security this quarter to help secure their code. We’re also leading in enterprise AI. Our new Azure-applied AI services help organizations like [Dal 00:07:48], Lufthansa, and Samsung apply AI to common business scenarios. And live captions in Twitter spaces are being powered by our speech services.

Satya: (07:59)
Finally, we are bringing the power of our partnership with open AI to both professional developers and domain experts. With GitHub co-pilot, professional developers can write code faster with less work. And using the world’s most powerful language model GPT-3, domain experts can build apps using natural language with our platform. Our platform has become the leading business process automation and productivity suite for domain experts across all functions. Power BI is the leader in business intelligence in the cloud. Organizations in every industry, including [Behr 00:08:35], Cerner, Rolls-Royce are choosing the platform to foster a data-driven culture.

Satya: (08:40)
The number of organizations using power apps is more than double year over year. BSF chose power apps to give 122,000 employees the capability to build low-code, no-code apps. And the Toyota fusion teams of pro developers and domain experts are using power apps and Azure pass services to improve quality control. All up, power platform revenue increased 83% over the past year.

Satya: (09:08)
And now, on to Dynamics 365. Every business function, including marketing sales, customer support, and supply chain will need to be reimagined for an AI first and collaboration first world. And the silos between communications, collaboration, and business process have to be broken down. With Dynamics 365, we are building a new generation of business applications to help organizations adapt to this new reality. We continue to gain share. Dynamics 365 revenue accelerated for the third consecutive quarter, up 49% year over year. We are helping businesses to become digitally sovereign over their customer interactions with our customer insights product with organizations like Columbia Sportswear, GNC, and LA Clippers, all choosing to unify customer profiles and deliver more personalized experiences.

Satya: (10:03)
We are empowering employees for hybrid work by creating a new category of collaborative applications, bringing business process directly into the flow of work. New integrations between Dynamics 365 and Teams enable anyone in an organization to seamlessly view and collaborate on customer records within teams without having to purchase multiple licenses. Customers want this, and no other vendor is doing this today. And we are helping organizations reimagine their core business process with new apps built for an age of omni-channel communications. With Dynamics 365, customer service organizations like Coca-Cola, [Renault 00:10:44], and [Jami 00:10:46] have a single, comprehensive solution to deliver consistent and personalized support across all channels.

Satya: (10:53)
Now, on to industry solutions. Over the past year, we have introduced industry clouds for financial services, healthcare, manufacturing, nonprofits, and retail. And this quarter, we announced our new Microsoft cloud for sustainability, bringing together capabilities across our stack to create an entirely new business process category, to help every organization address this very urgent need.

Satya: (11:19)
Now, onto LinkedIn. LinkedIn’s revenue surpassed $10 billion for the first time this fiscal year, up 27%, a testament to how mission-critical the platform has become to help people connect, learn, grow, and get hired over the course of their careers. In the past five years, since our acquisition, revenue has nearly tripled, and growth has accelerated. LinkedIn has become a leader across multiple secular growth areas, spanning B2B advertising, professional hiring, corporate learning, and sales intelligence. And from LinkedIn profiles within Office to LinkedIn learning courses within Microsoft Veeva, and LinkedIn sales navigator leads within Microsoft Dynamics 365, we have brought together the power of LinkedIn and Microsoft to transform how people learn, sell, and connect. LinkedIn has more than 774 million members who are more engaged than ever. Sessions were up 30% this quarter, compared to a year ago. And LinkedIn’s advertising business surpassed $1 billion in revenue this quarter for the first time, up 97% year over year, growing three times faster than the category.

Satya: (12:34)
Now, to Microsoft 365 and Teams. Hybrid work represents the biggest change to the way we work in a generation and will require a new operating model spanning people, places, and processes. We are the only cloud that supports everything an organization needs to successfully make the shift. Microsoft Teams is the new front end. It’s where people meet, chat, call, collaborate, and automate business processes all within the flow of work. Teams usage has never been higher. We are nearly 250 million monthly active users as people use Teams each day to communicate, collaborate, and coauthor content across work, life, and learning.

Satya: (13:19)
We are leading in the new and growing enterprise phone category. Just like video meetings, chat and business processes happen in Teams. Calls happen in Teams, creating a huge new opportunity. We have nearly 80 million monthly active Teams phones users with total calls surpassing 1 billion in a single month this quarter, and we’re just getting started. Teams is also at the center of orchestrating collaboration across the entire SaaS estate, from HR, to marketing, to finance. Leading third-party SaaS vendors, including Adobe, Atlassian, Salesforce, SAP ServiceNow, and Workday have now built apps that deeply integrate with Teams, bringing every business process and function directly into the flow of work. And we are bringing Teams to consumers so people can connect and collaborate with family and friends across desktop mobile and the web.

Satya: (14:14)
All this innovation is driving growth. 124 organizations now have more than a hundred thousand users of Teams. And nearly 3,000 have more than 10,000 users. More broadly across Microsoft 365, you’re seeing double-digit year over year seat growth in every segment from frontline and small business to enterprise. Leading companies like Behr, Siemens, Vodafone, all chose our premium EFI offerings for advanced security, compliance, voice, and analytics.

Satya: (14:46)
Now, on to employee experience cloud. Having a digital employee experience platform is critical for every organization. With Microsoft Veeva, we are creating an entirely new category, bringing together communications, learning, wellbeing, and knowledge directly into the flow of work. New capabilities empower leaders to build human capital, nurture wellbeing, and focus on employee results. We are seeing strong interest in early adoption in every industry from American Express and Barclays to AT&T and Mars. Humana chose Veeva to help 26,000 employees make the shift to hybrid work, gaining insights on everything from collaboration trends to manager effectiveness.

Satya: (15:29)
Now, on Windows. Windows 11 is the biggest update to our operating system in a decade. We are reimagining everything from the Windows platform, to store, to help people and organizations be more productive and secure, and build a more open ecosystem for developers and creators. We are delighted by early feedback. More people have downloaded our early builds than any other Windows release or update in the history of our insider program. And along with our OEM ecosystem, we are excited to bring Windows 11 to new PCs beginning this…

Satya: (16:03)
… We are excited to bring Windows 11 to new PCs beginning this holiday. And with Windows 365, we are creating a new category, the cloud PC. Just like applications move to the cloud with SAS, we are now bringing the operating system to the cloud, enabling organizations to stream the full Windows experience to any employee’s personal or corporate device.

Satya: (16:22)
Now onto security. With the cybersecurity landscape more complex than ever, it’s never been clearer that every organization will need to deploy and maintain a zero-trust security architecture. This is driving accelerated demand for our integrated end-to-end solution, spanning identity, security, compliance, and device management across all clouds and all platforms. No other vendor is recognized by analysts as the leader in as many categories. This is reflected in our share gains with nearly 600,000 organizations, including FedEx, Nestle, NTT, and Volkswagen using our security offerings across Azure and Microsoft 365.

Satya: (17:07)
We saw a 70% increase in the number of small and medium business customers. And it’s reflected in our sales growth with annual revenue continuing to increase 40% year over year. We’re going further to protect organizations in our recent acquisitions of CloudKnox, ReFirm Labs, and RiskIQ bolster our security capabilities in key areas, including identity management, IOT, and threat intelligence.

Satya: (17:36)
Now onto gaming. Gaming is the largest category in the entertainment industry, and we are expanding our opportunity to reach the world’s 3 billion gamers wherever and whenever they play. We are all in on games. At E3 last month, we unveiled our biggest games lineup ever, announcing 27 new titles, which will all be available to Game Pass subscribers. Game Pass is growing rapidly and it’s transforming how people discover, connect, and play games. Subscribers play approximately 40% more games and spend 50% more than non-members.

Satya: (18:14)
We continue to lead in the fast growing cloud gaming market, with just last month, we made Xbox cloud gaming available on PCs, as well as Apple phones and tablets via the browser and 22 countries with more to come. Millions have already streamed games to their desktops, tablets, and phones, and the Xbox series S and X are our fastest selling consoles ever, with more consoles live to date than any previous generation.

Satya: (18:45)
Finally, we continue to grow our opportunity in the creator economy, adding new ways for players to build and monetize their creations in many of our most popular games, including Flight Simulator and Minecraft. Creators earn more double what they did a year ago across all titles.

Satya: (19:03)
In closing, going forward, every person and every organization will require more digital technology to be more resilient and to transform. We are innovating across the entire tech stack to ensure our customers succeed in this new era. With that, I’ll hand it over to Amy.

Amy: (19:21)
Thank you Satya, and good afternoon everyone. This quarter revenue was $46.2 billion, up 21% and 17% in constant. Currency earnings per share was $2.17, increasing 49% and 42% in constant currency. In our largest quarter of the year, focused execution by our sales and partner teams, along with broad-based strength across geographical markets and customer segments drove another very strong quarter of top and bottom-line growth.

Amy: (19:57)
In our commercial business, healthy demand for our differentiated hybrid and cloud offerings, as well as increased long-term commitments to our platform, drove significant growth in the number of $10 million-plus Azure and Microsoft 365 contracts. Customer reliance on the Microsoft Cloud drove sequential increases in usage across Teams, Power Platform and our advanced security and identity offerings, which are empowering organizations to shift to hybrid work and modernize business processes. And in LinkedIn’s talent solutions business, an improving job market drove strength in annual contracts and job postings. In our on premises business, strong annuity performance across Office Server and Windows also benefited from a greater mix of contracts with higher-end period revenue recognition under ASC 606.

Amy: (20:52)
In our consumer business, Windows OEM and Surface were impacted by the ongoing constraints in the supply chain. Search and LinkedIn benefited from an improved advertising market. And in gaming, we again saw strong engagement across our platform, while demand for Xbox series X and S consoles continued to exceed supply. As a reminder, Q4 was the first full quarter impacted by COVID-19 a year ago, across revenue and operating expense.

Amy: (21:23)
This quarter, even with a declining expiration base, commercial bookings grew 30% and 25% in constant currency, significantly ahead of expectations, driven by strong execution across our core annuity sales motions, and an increase in the number of larger long-term Azure contracts. As a result, commercial remaining performance obligation increased 32% and 31% in constant currency to $141 billion. Roughly 45% will be recognized in revenue in the next 12 months, of 25% year over year. The remaining portion, which will be recognized beyond the next 12 months, increased 38% year over year, highlighting the growing longterm commitment to our Microsoft Cloud. And our annuity mix increased one point year over year to 95%. Commercial Cloud revenue, also better than expected, was $19.5 billion, as growth accelerated to 36% and 31% in constant currency. Commercial Cloud gross margin percentage expanded four points year over year to 70%, with roughly one point from the change in accounting estimate for the useful life of server and network equipment assets.

Amy: (22:42)
Excluding this impact, Commercial Cloud gross margin percentage increased, despite revenue mix shift to Azure, driven by improvement across all our cloud services on a prior year comparable impacted by strategic investments we made to support significant customer engagement and usage in remote work scenarios, including free trials, flexible financing options, and capacity for cloud infrastructure usage.

Amy: (23:06)
With the weaker US dollar, FX increased growth by approximately four points, about a point more favorable than anticipated. FX increased COGs growth by approximately one point and operating expense growth by approximately two points, both in line with expectations. Gross margin dollars increased 25% and 20% in constant currency. Gross margin percentage was 70%, up two points for over year, with roughly one point of favorable impact from the change in accounting estimate. Excluding this impact, company gross margin percentage increased, despite sales mix shift to the cloud, driven by Commercial Cloud gross margin percentage improvement noted earlier.

Amy: (23:50)
Operating expense grew 6% and 4% in constant currency, in line with expectations on a prior year comparable that included roughly four points of impact from the realignment of our retail stores strategy and two points of impact from an increase in bad debt expense.

Amy: (24:06)
Overall, company head count grew again this quarter of 12% year over year, as we continue to invest across key areas like cloud engineering, sales, and customer deployment.

Amy: (24:18)
Operating income increased 42% and 35% in constant currency and operating margins expanded 6 points year over year to 41%, including roughly 2 points of impact from the retail stores charge and increase in bad debt expense in the prior year, and nearly 1 point of favorable impact from the change in accounting estimate.

Amy: (24:40)
Now to our segment results. Revenue from productivity and business processes was $14.7 billion and grew 25% and 21% in constant currency, with better than expected performance across all businesses. Office commercial revenue grew 20% and 15% in constant currency. Office 365 commercial revenue grew 25% and 20% in constant currency, again, driven by installed base expansion across all workloads and customer segments, as well as higher ARPU.

Amy: (25:14)
Paid Office 365 commercial seats increased 17% year over year, with continued recovery driving acceleration in our small and medium business and frontline worker offerings. Demand for Microsoft 365, particularly for security, compliance, and voice drove strong E5 momentum again this quarter. E5 now accounts for 8% of our Office 365 commercial installed base. And on a low prior year comparable, impacted by a slowdown in transactional purchasing, Office commercial licensing was ahead of expectations down 8% and 11% in constant currency, also benefiting from higher end- period revenue recognition noted earlier.

Amy: (26:03)
In office consumer, revenue grew 18% and 15% in constant currency, driven by continued momentum in Microsoft 365 subscriptions, which grew to 51.9 million, up 22% year over year.

Amy: (26:18)
Dynamics revenue grew 33% and 26% in constant currency, better than expected. Dynamics 365 revenue growth was 49% and 42% in constant currency with strong momentum in power apps and power automate, reflecting growing demand for our modern solutions to build apps and automate workflows. Dynamics 365 now accounts for over 70% of total Dynamics revenue.

Amy: (26:47)
LinkedIn revenue increased 46% and 42% in constant currency, ahead of expectations, against a comparable impacted by the advertising and job markets of a year ago. Segment gross margin dollars increased 33% and 27% constant currency, and gross margin percentage was up five points year over year, primarily driven by improvement in our cloud services against a low prior year comparable, impacted mostly by increased usage. The change in accounting estimate drove roughly one point of favorable impact. Operating expense increased 8% and 6% in constant currency, and operating income increased 62% and 53% in constant currency, including 4 points due to the change in accounting estimate.

Amy: (27:33)
Next, the Intelligent Cloud segment. Revenue was $17.4 billion, increasing 30% and 26% in constant currency. We exceeded expectations across our consumption and per user Azure businesses, as well as in our on premises server products business. Overall, server products and cloud services revenue increased 34% and 29% in constant currency. Azure revenue grew 51% and 45% in constant currency, driven by strong performance across our core and premium consumption-based services.

Amy: (28:10)
In our per user business, the enterprise mobility and security install base increased 29% to over 190 million seats. Our on-premise server business increased 16% and 12% in constant currency, driven by strong annuity performance and benefiting roughly 4 points from the higher end-period revenue recognition noted earlier, particularly in some of our largest deals in the quarter.

Amy: (28:38)
Enterprise Services revenue grew 12% and 9% in constant currency, driven by growth in premier support services and Microsoft Consulting Services. Segment gross margin dollars increased 32% and 27% in constant currency. Gross margin percentage increased one point year over year, with roughly one point of favorable impact from the change in accounting estimate. Operating expense increased 14% and 12% in constant currency, and operating income grew 46% and 39% in constant currency, including 3 points due to the change in accounting estimate.

Amy: (29:15)
Now to more personal computing. Revenue was $14.1 billion, increasing 9% and 6% in constant currency, with better-than-expected performance in Windows commercial, gaming, and search, offsetting OEM and surface weakness from supply chain constraints. OEM revenue declined 3% and surface declined 20% and 23% in constant currency, as both were impacted by the significant supply-chain constraints noted earlier and a good demand environment. Windows Commercial Products and Cloud services revenue grew 20% and 14% in constant currency, driven by demand for Microsoft 365, with some benefit from the higher end-period revenue recognition noted earlier. Search revenue [XTech 00:30:03] increased 53% and 49% in constant currency, benefiting from the improved advertising market.

Amy: (30:10)
And in gaming, revenue increased 11% and 7% in constant currency. Xbox hardware revenue grew 172% and 163% in constant currency, driven by demand for our new consoles. Xbox in content and services revenue declined 4% and 7% in constant currency, against a high prior year comparable. Segment gross margin dollars increased 8% and 4% in constant currency, gross margin percentage decrease roughly 1 point year over year, driven by sales mix shift to gaming hardware. Operating expense decreased 6% and 7% in constant currency, including approximately 13 points of impact from the retail stores charge in the prior year. And operating income grew 19% and 13% in constant currency.

Amy: (31:01)
Now, back to our total company results. Capital expenditures, including financed leases, were $7.3 billion, in line with expectations, driven by ongoing investment to support growing global demand and usage of our Cloud services. Cash paid for PP&E was $6.5 billion. Cashflow from operations was $22.7 billion, increasing 22% year over year, driven by strong Cloud billings and collections. Free cashflow was $16.3 billion, up 17%, reflecting higher capital expenditures in support of our growing Cloud business. For FY21, we generated over $76 billion in operating cashflow, up 26% year over year, and over $56 billion in free cash flow, up 24% year over year. This quarter, other income and expense was $310 million, higher than anticipated, primarily driven by net gains on investments. As a reminder …

Amy: (32:03)
… primarily driven by net gains on investments. As a reminder, we are required to recognize mark-to-market gains or losses on our equity portfolio. Our effective tax rate was approximately 15%. And finally, we returned $10.4 billion to shareholders through share repurchases and dividends, bringing our total cash return to shareholders to over $39 billion for the full fiscal year. Now, before we turn to our outlook, I’d like to provide a few reminders for next fiscal year. Revenue growth rates across all segments will reflect the impact from COVID-19 a year ago, though, the impacts do shift as we move through the year. Also, our FY21 operating income and margin benefited from two factors that will be headwinds in FY22. First, the change in accounting estimate for the useful life of server and network equipment resulted in $2.7 billion of depreciation expense, shifting from FY21 to future periods. And second, we saved nearly $1.2 billion in operating expense from COVID-19 related restrictions, which will also moderate in FY22 as geographies reopen globally. With those reminders in place, let’s move to our next quarter outlook.

Amy: (33:17)
Accelerating digital transformation and consistent strong execution should drive another quarter of growing commitment to our Microsoft cloud. In commercial bookings, our core annuity sales motions should drive healthy growth on a growing expiry base, even against the strong prior year comparable. As always, quarterly volatility and bookings can be driven by an increasing mix of larger longterm Azure contracts, which are more unpredictable in their timing. Commercial cloud gross margin percentage should decrease roughly one point year-over-year, with roughly four points of negative impact from a change in accounting estimate previously discussed. Excluding the accounting change, Q1 gross margin percentage will increase despite revenue mix shift to Azure, driven by continued improvement across our cloud services on a prior year comparable impacted by the strategic investments we mentioned earlier. Longer term, which excludes the impact of the accounting change, commercial cloud gross margin percentage will continue to be impacted by the same three things we often discuss, revenue mix shift to Azure, increased usage of our cloud services, and ongoing strategic investments to support our customer’s success. In capital expenditures, we expect a sequential increase on a dollar basis, as we continue to invest to meet global demand for our cloud services. Now to FX. Based on current rates, we expect FX to increase revenue growth at the total company and all individuals segment levels by approximately two points, and total operating expense in COGS growth by approximately one point. Now, to segment guidance. In productivity and business processes, we expect revenue between 14.5 and $14.75 billion. In office commercial, revenue growth will again be driven by Office 365 with healthy seek growth across segments and continued momentum in E5. In our on-premises business, we expect revenue to decline approximately 20%, consistent with the ongoing customer shift to the cloud. In office consumer against a strong prior year comparable, we expect high single digit revenue growth with continued momentum in Microsoft 365 consumer subscriptions. For LinkedIn, continued strong engagement on the platform and improvements in the advertising and job markets should drive revenue growth in the high 30% range. And in Dynamics, we expect continued strength in Dynamics 365, which includes our significant momentum in Power Apps, to drive revenue growth in the high twenties.

Amy: (35:57)
For Intelligent Cloud, we expect revenue between 16.4 and $16.65 billion. In Azure, revenue will be driven by continued strong growth in our consumption based business. And our per user business should continue to benefit from Microsoft 365 suite momentum, though we expect some moderation in growth rate, given the size of the installed base. Therefore, in constant currency, Azure revenue growth should remain relatively stable on a sequential basis. In our on-premises server business, we expect revenue growth in the high single digits, driven by continued demand for our hybrid and premium annuity offerings against a low prior year comparable. And enterprise services, we expect revenue to be in the high single digits. In more personal computing, we have estimated the Q1 one impact of the required Windows 11 revenue deferral that will shift to Q2, to be approximately $300 million. Therefore, our segment revenue outlook is 12.4 to $12.8 billion. Given the 10 point estimated negative impact from the deferral, OEM revenues should decline mid to high single digits in Q1. In.

Amy: (37:16)
Surface, on a strong prior year comparable, we expect revenue to decline in the low teens as we continue to work through the supply chain challenges. In Windows Commercial, products and cloud surfaces continue demand for Microsoft 365, and our advanced security solutions should drive healthy double digit growth. In search Extech, we expect revenue growth in the high thirties, driven by improvements in the advertising market. In gaming, we expect revenue growth in the low double digits, console growth will again be constrained by supply. And on a strong prior year comparable, X-Box content and services revenue should grow low single digits. Now back to company guidance. We expect COGS of 13.55 to $13.75 billion, and a operating expense of 11.6 to $11.7 billion. In other income and expense, interest, income, and expense should offset each other. And finally, we expect our Q1 tax rate to be approximately 16% lower than our expected full year rate, given the volume of equity best in our first quarter.

Amy: (38:29)
In closing, we remain focused on driving revenue growth, as we invest boldly against the strategic high growth opportunities ahead, that will deliver significant value to our customers worldwide. Our outlook for FY22 reflects this, with healthy double digit revenue and operating income growth. Together, that results in expanded operating margins in FY22, after excluding the headwinds from the useful life change noted earlier. Together with our customers and partners, we look forward to FY22. Now, Brett, let’s go to Q&A.

Brett: (39:14)
Thanks, Amy. We’ll now move to Q&A. Out of respect for others on the call, we request the participants please only ask one question. Operator, can you please repeat your instructions?

Operator: (39:25)
Absolutely. To queue a question, please press *1 on your telephone keypad. The confirmation tone will indicate that your line is in the question queue. You may press *2. If you would like to remove your question from the queue. For participants using speaker equipment, it may be necessary to pick up your handset before pressing the * key. Our first question is coming from the line of Keith Weiss with Morgan Stanley. Please proceed with your question.

Keith Weiss: (39:49)
Thank you for taking the question, guys, and congratulations on a great FY21 and a great end to the fiscal year. Satya, Last year at this time, you made a comment that I think really defined the conversation in software over the past year, when you’re talking about an acceleration in digital transformation you saw coming out of COVID. And I think that’s evident in the results that we see here with 25% growth in your commercial bookings growth. What I want to ask you is the durability that growth on a going forward basis, was that acceleration of pull forward of demand and at some point we’re going to add that hard comp? Where do you see durability in this acceleration on a go forward basis? Is there a lot more to come.

Keith Weiss: (40:31)
And then, Amy, to you a similar kind of question, but more on sort of the margin side of the equation. I think your entire tenure at Microsoft has really been defined by good operational controls and ability to grow gross profit dollars well ahead of OPEX. In that durable longer term, is there still enough sort of efficiency gains at Microsoft to be able to keep that up over the medium term, if you will?

Satya : (41:02)
Thanks so much, Keith, for the question. The way we see the results today reflect that, but more importantly, on a secular basis. I always go back to that number, which is 5% of the world GDP is tech spend. It’s projected to double. I think that doubling will happen in a more accelerated pace. And we feel well positioned because of the innovation across the Stack. Because if you think about it, what’s going to happen is every business, whether you’re a retailer, a manufacturer, in the service sector, public sector, or private sector, digital adoption is the way you’re going to be both resilient, as well as transform the core business processes. And the strength we have is that entirety of the Microsoft cloud Stack.

Satya : (41:51)
So it’s not just about infrastructure or any application, it’s the entirety of what we do. And so I think it is durable. Quarter to quarter, depending on what happened during the pandemic, depending on the segments that were impacted, for example, the consumer segments that were impacted are coming back, and then they’ll normalize. Whereas in our case, we do. In fact, one of the things I love about sort of our exposure is both it’s a worldwide exposure, and it has got the right balance between the consumer segments and the enterprise business-to-business segments. So it’s a very durable longterm growth prospect that we have tough competition, and we need to keep innovating, which is what we’ll stay focused on.

Amy: (42:32)
And maybe turning to your margin question. And while I am obviously proud of the work we done, Keith, you referenced as a team on margins and returns, I would say in general, our focus remains and has been for the duration of really Satya and I’s work together along with the rest of the SLT, on consistently moving our resources and talent to our highest growth and most differentiated places. When you do that in expansive total addressable markets, in the way that I believe we’re focused on as an organization, you do see the type of operating leverage that you’re referring to in margins. And that along, as you see, sort of mathematically with a shift in our revenue to higher overall gross margin segments, you do get the results we’ve seen. So I feel very good about the work we’ve done. And as you heard, I’m quite optimistic about the opportunities we have to invest leading into FY22 as well.

Keith Weiss: (43:39)
Excellent. Thank you so much, guys.

Brett: (43:41)
Thanks Keith. Operator, next question please.

Operator: (43:45)
Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Mark Moerdler with Bernstein Research. Please proceed with your question.

Mark Moerdler: (43:51)
Thank you very much for taking the question. And again, also congrats on the quarter. And Amy, thanks for the details and colors, especially in the guidance. So I want to ask about seasonality in Azure. Traditionally we’ve seen seasonality in the Azure numbers in Q4. And obviously last year we didn’t see it because of COVID, but we also didn’t see it this year. Has something changed that has changed the seasonality of the business, and does that continue going forward? And then as a followup question, Keith asked about OPEX efficiency overall, but I’d like to ask specifically on the cloud. Is there any reason that cloud OPEX shouldn’t continue to grow slower than revenue, obviously on an annual basis, not a quarterly basis? Thank you.

Amy: (44:39)
Thanks, Mark, for the question. Let me cover your first one, which is the seasonality in the Azure business. In some ways, Mark, some of that seasonality frankly, was because Azure has two fundamental components. It’s got a consumption model as well as a per user model. The per user model, which as you well know, is far more aligned to our sort of end of year and can be more aligned to our end of year rhythms. It also can have more quarterly volatility in terms of accounting, in terms of revenue recognition, the same topic we often talk about when it comes to Microsoft 365, in terms of more in quarter recognition. What you’ve seen is that did historically represent a larger component of Azure. So added volatility to Q4. As we’ve seen our consumption businesses grow and grow consistently, and thus far becoming a larger percentage of Azure, you do have more stability, Mark. And so you start seeing less of that volatility that we’ve historically seen from Q3 to Q4. We still have some of it, as we talked about, but I think it’s a interesting observation and it’s a very good question. In terms of your comment on cloud revenue and OPEX, yes, I do believe that’s durable. We get a lot of focus. We’ll continue to invest. There’s lots of opportunity there, but the market certainly warrants it.

Mark Moerdler: (46:13)
Makes sense and I appreciate all the detail. Thank you very much for your answer.

Brett: (46:18)
Thanks, Mark. Operator, next question please.

Operator: (46:21)
Our next question is coming from the line of Brent Thill with Jefferies. Please proceed with your question.

Brent Thill: (46:29)
Amy, a lot of questions on margins. I’m curious if you think there is a ceiling in the near term on margins, or do you feel that you’ve got to an elevated flight level, if you will, and we shouldn’t have to be worrying about that level of margins? Can you just give us any more colors that relates to how you’re thinking about that? Thank you.

Amy: (46:49)
Well, I think for FY22 on operating margins, which is really where I focus most of my thoughts, as I said, when you exclude the useful life change, I feel very good about margin improvement at FY22. But what sits behind that, Brent, is this focus on the first thing I said, which is, “With every operating expense dollar we invest, are we continuing to invest it in the highest growth places?” If you continue to invest in high growth places with differentiation that customers care about and you add value, you continue to see improvements in this area. From time to time, I’m sure there’ll be quarters where that isn’t the case if we have some mix shift in hardware, et cetera. But in general, overall, a longer period of time, you’ve seen us focus on this. And so if you remove a little of the noise of some of the useful life changes and look back a few years, I do think you’d see the biggest needle mover being where we invest the dollars as opposed to the overall amount of them, which should grow based on the opportunity.

Amy: (48:01)
… Should grow based on the opportunity.

Speaker 2: (48:04)
Thank you.

Speaker 3: (48:06)
Thanks, Fred. Operator, next question, please.

Operator: (48:10)
Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Carl [Kiersed 00:48:13] with UBS. Please proceed with your question.

Carl: (48:16)
Thanks very much. Amy, thank you for giving more formal Azure guidance for the next quarter. That’s very helpful. So if Azure is going to remain stable in constant currency, I guess at 45%, and you had indicated that EMS growth should moderate, effectively you’re saying that the consumption piece of Azure might accelerate in the September quarter. So I’m wondering if you could unpack that a little bit. Is this as simple as prior period commitments ramping at an accelerated pace? I’d love to hear your thoughts. Thank you.

Amy: (48:48)
Thanks, Carl. You know, I think in general you’ve got the right trajectory. And I do think it’s both things. You’ve heard me say it’s both some of our core as well as premium SKUs. We’ve seen some nice execution, and I think Satya mentioned some of these differentiated places in the Azure stack where I think we also can see some growth. Data services is a very good point where I feel like we’ve made a lot of progress, have a real differentiation, and have seen some acceleration in the past couple of quarters.

Carl: (49:25)
Got it. Thank you.

Speaker 3: (49:28)
Thanks, Carl. Operator, next question, please.

Operator: (49:31)
Our next question is coming from Mark Murphy with JP Morgan. Please proceed with your question.

Mark Murphy: (49:38)
Yes, thank you very much. Satya, at the Ignite conference a few months ago you commented that cloud architectures have reached peak centralization. I’m wondering what developments are you seeing that inform your viewpoint. And Amy, do you sense uplift in some of those intelligent edge products such as Azure stack or others contributing to the improvement in server product growth that we saw this quarter?

Satya : (50:10)
Thanks so much for that question. A couple of things that are happening. One is that all of even what we consider the cloud infrastructure is getting increasingly distributed. If you think about the approach we took to our data center architecture, the fact that we have more regions, is to me, I would say, both the real world needs for the computing architecture side, but also the regulatory and data residency requirements. So we feel we picked the right approach and that’s paying dividends today just even in terms of our geographic coverage, our coverage of all of the regulatory requirements. Then the second piece, of course, is distributed computing will remain distributed. And what we are seeing with edge is going to be the case, where we will more of both the old workloads with hybrid benefits and hybrid deployments, as well as new workloads.

Satya : (51:07)
So if you take the AB InBev digital twin meets IoT type of scenario, that’s going to require a lot more compute close to their factories. And so to me those new scenarios, or 5G, think about what AT&T is planning to do, which is a hybrid deployment in a completely new space where there is going to be compute that’s located to be able to take core network traffic and use cloud economics. So that’s what we think of going forward, which is really, compute will remain distributed both because of the needs across geographies, regulation, and the very nature of compute architecture.

Amy: (51:54)
And to the question you asked on how to think about the edge and where to see that in results, really it shows up, this was one where I would focus on the overall server products and cloud services number, which I think, Mark, was at the heart of your question. Because through our purchasing vehicles, the most effective way to purchase for flexibility across the edge and the cloud is sometimes some of the on-prem licensing with hybrid rights. So you do see that both in our Azure results, but also depending on how it’s purchased and server KPI.

Mark Murphy: (52:32)
Thank you very much.

Speaker 3: (52:35)
Thanks, Mark. Operator, next question, please.

Operator: (52:38)
Thank you. Our next question comes from Brent [Bracelin 00:52:41] with Piper Sandler. Please proceed with your question.

Brent: (52:45)
Good afternoon, and thanks for taking the call here. Question for you really around $10 million+ contracts. You called out momentum this quarter and last quarter. My question is around the drivers of these larger enterprise commitments. Is this driven by just the larger scope of deals, or are you seeing broader attach rate across the whole breadth of Microsoft cloud products? Thanks.

Amy: (53:12)
Thanks, Brent. Maybe, Satya, I’ll take this one first, and if you want to add anything. Brent, unfortunately I’m going to answer, it’s everything. And let me talk about why I say that. When you see the size of the contracts increase, it’s about the entire scope of what’s offered under the Microsoft cloud. We’re seeing both really strong renewals of our core contracts, really strong additions across dynamics, power apps, power automate, M365, premium SKUs, security, compliance, voice, which of course increases those commitment sizes. And you’re seeing the addition of Azure commitments, which we often talk about as these multi-year longer term contracts. And so then you do, of course, see them just have longer duration, especially in the case of Azure.

Amy: (54:08)
So in many ways, what we focus on are the components that make up the larger contracts. Is each component being additive to selling the value that’s present across all of our pieces of the Microsoft cloud? And this was a good execution quarter for us. You see it in the bookings number even more. When you have a declining expiry base and then bookings growth, that’s that high, you have to do all those things well. And that’s, I think, really what’s reflected ultimately and transactionally, meaning those larger $10 million+ contracts being done.

Brent: (54:51)
Thank you.

Speaker 3: (54:51)
Thanks, Brent. Operator, next question, please.

Operator: (54:57)
Thank you. Our next question comes from Alex Lukin with Wolf Research. Please proceed with your question.

Alex Lukin: (55:04)
Hey guys, thanks for taking the question. I guess my main question, maybe for Satya, you’ve noted the future of work having changed and you talked about the fusion of Teams into both the application stack, the operating system stack, and really amongst the entire Microsoft portfolio. Is that driving, given the acceleration you’re seeing in Dynamics, can you talk to the fact, is that driving larger deals, new bites at the apple, or how is that changing the landscape and how do you think about that versus what your competitors are doing?

Satya : (55:41)
Yeah, that’s a great question. Thanks for that. Multiple things happening, and some of them are independent secular growth trends and they do reinforce each other. Let’s just take Dynamics. It’s probably one of the most exciting things we are seeing, is that coming out of this pandemic there is an absolute new chapter for a complete new suite, all the way from whether it’s sales to customer service to marketing to supply chain or digital manufacturing, that’s all going to be reimplemented. So there’s going to be a complete new cycle of business process automation that is going to be AI first and collaboration first. And that second part is where that intersection between Teams and business process or Dynamics comes through, because you do not want to have a system of record for anything, whether it is a customer or a part or a forecast that you don’t want to collaborate on, that you don’t want to communicate on.

Satya : (56:42)
And by the way, the communications and the collaboration artifacts are part of the record. And that’s what I think that this new generation of software will enable. And so you see it in two fronts. One is, Teams has become a platform, not just for Dynamics, even for Salesforce, for SAP, for Adobe, for Service Now. They’re all building great integrations into Teams and we’ll foster that. And Dynamics itself, of course, will integrate deeply with Teams and embed Teams or Azure communication services.

Satya : (57:15)
So when you think about our omni-channel customer service module, it doesn’t look like anything from two years ago. It’s a completely rebuilt omni-channel customer service system, which has all the communication functionality built in. So it’s a pretty exciting space, and it also speaks to a lot of the questions around, where’s the margin, how is it going to evolve? I think tracking what’s happening with Power Platform, Dynamics, and Teams I think probably, and its intersection to even some of our data layers in Azure, is perhaps the best indication of some of our competitor differentiation at scale already.

Alex Lukin: (57:58)
Perfect. Thank you guys so much.

Speaker 3: (58:00)
Thanks, Alex. Operator, we have time for one last question.

Operator: (58:04)
Thank you. Our final question comes from the line of Keith Bachman with Bank of Montreal. Please proceed with your question.

Keith Bachman: (58:11)
Hi, many thanks for taking the question, Amy, I wanted to direct this to you and go back to margins for a second. Is there any comment or color that you could provide? I know you said you focus on the operating margin side, but on the trends that you anticipate this year, in ’22, around gross margins with or without the depreciation schedules. Part B is, on the last quarter call you indicated that operating expenses might grow mid-teen, or low teens, I should say, in ’22. I was wondering if you would want to update the comments on how we should be thinking about operating expense trends as we look at FY ’22. Thank you.

Amy: (58:53)
Thanks, Keith. When I think about your operating expense comments, no, I don’t have any update to that. I think if you think about our head count growth at 12%+ through the year, continuing to invest in some of the places where we saw savings for the year on COVID, I would expect that that is still a good placeholder for people as we work through the year. With the opportunity we see in the market, I think it supports that level. And given our execution when we do invest, which leads me to margin, I feel very good about that. At the gross margin level we’ll continue to focus really on the same things we’ve always focused on, which is continuing across our cloud services to see improving margins. You’ll continue to see a mix shift to Azure, given the growth we expect there, and we’ll continue to see gross margin improvements across individual services that make up many of our components across the company. So in general I feel like the gross margin trends are quite healthy heading into ’22.

Alex Lukin: (01:00:06)
Okay, great. Thank you.

Speaker 3: (01:00:09)
Thanks, Keith. So that wraps up the Q&A portion of today’s earnings call. Thank you for joining us today, and we look forward to speaking with all of you soon.

Amy: (01:00:16)
Thank you, everyone.

Satya : (01:00:18)
Thank you.

Operator: (01:00:22)
Ladies and gentlemen, this concludes today’s conference. We thank you for your participation, and you may disconnect your lines at this time.

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