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Posted in Finance, Microsoft, Novell at 7:15 am by Dr. Roy Schestowitz
[Update: A reader points out that “the graph is of cumulative debt. Which equates with MSFT having around $6Bn debt from being debt free in Q2 2008.”]
Microsoft’s debt exceeds even Madoff’s
Summary: Microsoft’s debt — like Novell’s debt — is a scarcely-explored subject in the media, but we’ve finally found the latest figures
OUR WIKI now contains this page about Microsoft’s financial situation. It is not what many people imagine it to be and last year we pointed out that Microsoft has debt. Yes, it’s true. We just couldn’t quite tell at the time how big the debt was, but now we have a clue. Here is some background reading:
=> ↺ this page about Microsoft’s financial situation | last year we pointed out that Microsoft has debt
Shareholder Likens Steve Ballmer and Bill Gates to Bernard MadoffDid Microsoft Pay Millions of Dollars to Hide Information About Financial Malpractice?The SEC is Going After Microsoft (Again), Not Just Goldman SachsMicrosoft Has No Money AnymoreMicrosoft 2.0: A Company of DebtFinancial Fraud Claimed at Microsoft; Microsoft Paid Microsoft Witness to Shut UpCharles Pancerzewski and Microsoft Fraud Revisited (Updated)
Business Insider shows data from a reliable source, indicating that Microsoft’s debt is going through the roof (increasing faster than Microsoft can keep up with). Read the numbers. While Google and Apple have no debt, Microsoft has a huge debt approaching a tenth of a trillion dollars. Microsoft relies on shareholders to put their money in this pit.
=> ↺ shows
Tech companies, which generally throw off tons of cash, added a healthy sum of debt to their balance sheets last year, the Wall Street Journal notes.
We are increasingly welcoming a world where companies with a sort of overdraft claim to be “cash rich”. It’s the same world where a country with 14+ trillion dollars in debt pretends the problem will just go away and asks Microsoft to create computer games to mitigate perception issues [1, 2].
“While Google and Apple have no debt, Microsoft has a huge debt approaching a tenth of a trillion dollars.”Microsoft’s debt is not so unusual, but it is far greater than the rest. Novell’s own debt is an issue we explored last year.
=> an issue we explored last year
Many of Microsoft’s business units make no money. They just lose a lot of money, but people continue to think about Windows and Office, which are the exception, not the norm. These are cash cows whose revenue is actually declining (Office revenue is still going down). We mentioned this some days ago when we cited Joseph Tartakoff, but as Tartakoff later points out (regarding the same article of his that he tweeted about 4 times): “Microsoft’s online losses up to a staggering $713 million, from $411 million a year ago” (this is not surprising at all).
=> revenue is actually declining
That’s the loss in just one quarter and one business unit! It used to be over $2 billion in losses per year, now it’s around $3 billion in losses per year, assuming this new pace of losses carries on.
More information about Microsoft’s real financial performance is coming soon. We are going through reports and interpreting them. It doesn’t look too good.
Microsoft keeps taking on debt, whereas some of its biggest competitors remain debt free. Terry Porter writes: “It’s interesting that Google and Apple both deploy Unix and are debt free, so perhaps using Unix must be good for business?” █
“Microsoft, the world’s most valuable company, declared a profit of $4.5 billion in 1998; when the cost of options awarded that year, plus the change in the value of outstanding options, is deducted, the firm made a loss of $18 billion, according to Smithers.”
–The Economist, 1999
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