REDMOND, Wash. — Microsoft said Wednesday that its revenue for the October-December quarter was $81.3 billion, up 17% from the same time last year as it furthers its goal to expand global adoption of its artificial intelligence tools.
The company reported net profit for the quarter of $30.9 billion, or $4.14 per share, beating Wall Street expectations. Those results excluded the impact from Microsoft's investments in ChatGPT maker OpenAI.
Microsoft was expected to earn $3.91 per share on revenue of $80.31 billion for the October-December quarter, according to analysts surveyed by FactSet Research.
Microsoft's profit was higher, at $38.5 billion, or $5.16 per share, when not incorporating its OpenAI investments, reflecting a new accounting practice the company says it will be using going forward.
Those investments reflect OpenAI's restructuring last year. Microsoft had a roughly 27% percent, or $135 billion stake, in OpenAI as the startup, originally a nonprofit, has converted itself into a new for-profit public benefit corporation.
While no longer OpenAI's exclusive cloud provider, a relationship that helped bankroll the AI company's early growth, Microsoft also will retain commercial rights to OpenAI products through 2032.
Sales from Microsoft's AI-focused cloud computing business segment was $32.9 billion for the last three months of the year, up 29% from the same time last year and above the $32.4 billion expected by analysts polled by FactSet.
Despite beating expectations, Microsoft stock dropped nearly 5% in after-hours trading after it released its earnings report.