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Annanig
07-14-2017,
MSFT got bashed today. anyone interested? I know Boo has a comment.

apacfurob
07-15-2017,
I will wait for the smoke to clear. Look at INTC. It has taken over a month for it to begin a small recovery

AnnaEti
07-17-2017,
Commentary: Shareholders learned lesson the hard way today

This story updates an earlier version, published before the close of U.S. markets Friday, to reflect the percentage drop in Microsoft shares based on their closing price.

SAN FRANCISCO (MarketWatch) -- Retail investors who lost money on Microsoft Corp. Friday, and those watching the carnage from a safe distance, should take an important lesson away.

That lesson is contained in a maxim that savvy professional investors already know: Stocks that lead one bull market almost never lead the next, especially when several years separate the two runs.

Before suffering their biggest drop in almost six years today, Microsoft shares (MSFT) were up 5% this year.

Granted, that's not much in a market where some upstart memory-chip makers, commodity ETFs and energy firms posted gains of 40% or more during the first quarter.

AnvinUnicle
07-18-2017,
But it was SOMETHING, AT LEAST, for all the die-hard Microsoft shareholders who've watched the stock do nothing for three years, even as the Nasdaq climbed more than 60%.

Earlier this year, those who dream of the day that the company's growth will reignite and carry the stock back to its glorious highs were heartened after the financial magazine Barron's and several long-time software analysts at big Wall Street firms predicted as much. (Barron's, like MarketWatch, is owned by Dow Jones & Co.)

The theme underlying all the bullish commentary was this: Microsoft's updated version of its Windows operating system, known as Vista, combined with new releases of its server software and Office applications would prompt a buying spree among U. S. corporate customers who, by the way, are flush with cash.

Given that Windows runs 90% of the world's PCs and Office dominates the market for, well, office applications, it sounded plausible. Microsoft investors who closed their eyes could almost hear the first riffs of the Rolling Stones "Start Me Up," which heralded the marketing campaign for Windows 95 and preceded a huge run-up in the firm's profits and share price.

aojlhjpo09
07-19-2017,
There's only one problem with that tune -- it's so 20th Century.

Any investor or analyst who thinks that corporate chief information officers are chomping at the bit to spend millions of dollars on Vista should pick up a copy of CIO magazine, as I occasionally do.

The buzzword these days for CIO's is ROI, as in return on investment. Full coffers notwithstanding, the people who buy IT products at large companies want to know one thing before they sign a purchase order: "When will this investment pay for itself?"

Microsoft will have difficulty answering that question because, in developed economies, the days of improving worker productivity by putting a personal computer on everyone's desk, are mostly over. Developing economies like China and India are another matter, but those markets remain relatively small for Microsoft, and the reasons why Microsoft's growth in the former will be inhibited is fodder for another column (think 'software piracy').

CIOs -- when they're not spending more on servers and storage gear to comply with new accounting and data storage requirements -- are looking at mobile applications, Internet-based software, bandwidth optimization, outsourcing IT management and consulting -- and any other software or service that lets them do more work with less people.