Windows division
Microsoft's Windows division has been on something of a roll recently, but a deeper look into the company's financials seems to indicate that the reported numbers might look better than reality. Information Week has done some deep digging into Microsoft's recent SEC filings and found that several bookkeeping changes resulted in significantly increased reportings of profits in the company's Windows division. Revenues that had been assigned in previous quarters to other divisions within the company -- mostly the Entertainment and Devices unit which includes highly successful businesses such as Xbox -- were, in this past quarter, re-assigned to the Windows operating system division.
So just how much money was moved? Well, according to Information Week and the relevant SEC filings statements, about $259 million, or a boost of 6.5% in profit to the division overall for a total of $4.24 billion rather than the $3.98 billion originally stated for Q1 2010. This also resulted in a 25% reduction in profits for EDD, while the total profits -- $12.92 billion -- stayed exactly the same. Of course, all these bookkeeping maneuvers mean that Redmond's Windows division looked like it was making a decent amount more cash than it actually was, and when taking into account another complex move -- that of deferring $1.5 billion in upgrade revenues from Windows Vista machines sold in Q4 2009 to Windows 7 in Q1 2010 -- the resulting picture is a bit different than it would appear on the surface. Ultimately, it looks like Microsoft raked in an 11% increase in Windows profits rather than the 66% reported, when removing both the bookkeeping changes from other units and the upgrade deferrals. Of course, this is all apparently technically on the up-and-up, in terms of financial reporting is concerned, but it does give some insight into the stunning profits recorded in the Windows division as of late.Microsoft accounting shuffling resulted in higher sales for Windows division originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 15 Nov 2010 17:10:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
cb-dir.blog.ca/2010/11/15/brewii-9976172/
cb-dir.blog.ca/2010/11/15/stocks-no-loss-robo-trade-9976180/
cb-dir.blog.ca/2010/11/15/no-nonsense-muscle-building-9976201/
cb-dir.blog.ca/2010/11/15/viral-submitter-pro-9976602/
cb-dir.blog.ca/2010/11/15/guru-siphon-formula-9976635/
cb-dir.blog.ca/2010/11/15/joanas-world-9976644/
cb-dir.blog.ca/2010/11/15/flirt-mastery-9976652/
cb-dir.blog.ca/2010/11/15/singorama-9976660/
cb-dir.blog.ca/2010/11/15/ps3-lights-fix-9976668/
cb-dir.blog.ca/2010/11/15/rocket-piano-the-best-way-to-learn-piano-9976672/
cb-dir.blog.ca/2010/11/15/football-loophole-9976753/
cb-dir.blog.ca/2010/11/15/jamorama-guitar-9976750/
cb-dir.blog.ca/2010/11/15/roulette-assault-9976760/
cb-dir.blog.ca/2010/11/15/silver-lotto-system-9976771/
So just how much money was moved? Well, according to Information Week and the relevant SEC filings statements, about $259 million, or a boost of 6.5% in profit to the division overall for a total of $4.24 billion rather than the $3.98 billion originally stated for Q1 2010. This also resulted in a 25% reduction in profits for EDD, while the total profits -- $12.92 billion -- stayed exactly the same. Of course, all these bookkeeping maneuvers mean that Redmond's Windows division looked like it was making a decent amount more cash than it actually was, and when taking into account another complex move -- that of deferring $1.5 billion in upgrade revenues from Windows Vista machines sold in Q4 2009 to Windows 7 in Q1 2010 -- the resulting picture is a bit different than it would appear on the surface. Ultimately, it looks like Microsoft raked in an 11% increase in Windows profits rather than the 66% reported, when removing both the bookkeeping changes from other units and the upgrade deferrals. Of course, this is all apparently technically on the up-and-up, in terms of financial reporting is concerned, but it does give some insight into the stunning profits recorded in the Windows division as of late.Microsoft accounting shuffling resulted in higher sales for Windows division originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 15 Nov 2010 17:10:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
cb-dir.blog.ca/2010/11/15/brewii-9976172/
cb-dir.blog.ca/2010/11/15/stocks-no-loss-robo-trade-9976180/
cb-dir.blog.ca/2010/11/15/no-nonsense-muscle-building-9976201/
cb-dir.blog.ca/2010/11/15/viral-submitter-pro-9976602/
cb-dir.blog.ca/2010/11/15/guru-siphon-formula-9976635/
cb-dir.blog.ca/2010/11/15/joanas-world-9976644/
cb-dir.blog.ca/2010/11/15/flirt-mastery-9976652/
cb-dir.blog.ca/2010/11/15/singorama-9976660/
cb-dir.blog.ca/2010/11/15/ps3-lights-fix-9976668/
cb-dir.blog.ca/2010/11/15/rocket-piano-the-best-way-to-learn-piano-9976672/
cb-dir.blog.ca/2010/11/15/football-loophole-9976753/
cb-dir.blog.ca/2010/11/15/jamorama-guitar-9976750/
cb-dir.blog.ca/2010/11/15/roulette-assault-9976760/
cb-dir.blog.ca/2010/11/15/silver-lotto-system-9976771/
0 Comments
[ + ] Show comments
Answers (0)
Please log in to answer
Be the first to answer this question
Rating comments in this legacy AppDeploy message board thread won't reorder them,
so that the conversation will remain readable.
so that the conversation will remain readable.