Yahoo Finance
Yahoo Finance
Microsoft Q3 2026 earnings beat on cloud and AI growth

Microsoft Q3 2026 earnings beat on cloud and AI growth

Yahoo Finance

Yahoo Finance

Microsoft Q3 2026 earnings beat on cloud and AI growth

Thu, 30 Apr 2026 06:29:51 GMT
Microsoft Q3 2026 earnings beat on cloud and AI growth

Microsoft reported fiscal third-quarter revenue of $82.9 billion, up 18% from the same period a year earlier, with earnings per share of $4.27 on a GAAP basis, up 23% year over year. Wall Street had been looking for revenue of $81.39 billion and earnings of $4.06 per share, per CNBC.

Compared with $25.82 billion earned in the same period last year, net income climbed to $31.78 billion in the quarter that closed March 31. Microsoft returned $10.2 billion to shareholders through dividends and stock repurchases during the quarter.

Microsoft's AI business surpassed an annual revenue run rate of $37 billion, up 123% year over year, CEO Satya Nadella said in a statement. Adoption of the 365 Copilot AI add-on for commercial Office users has reached more than 20 million seats, a jump from the 15 million figure the company shared in January, according to CNBC.

Growth of 40% in Azure and other cloud services cleared the roughly 39% analysts had penciled in. Revenue for the wider Intelligent Cloud segment — covering Azure, server products, and the GitHub and Nuance cloud services — came in at $34.68 billion, a 30% increase from a year ago.

At $35.01 billion, up roughly 17%, the Productivity and Business Processes segment — home to Office software, LinkedIn, and Dynamics — topped analyst forecasts. Microsoft 365 Consumer cloud revenue grew 33%, while Dynamics 365 revenue rose 22%. LinkedIn revenue increased 12%.

Total Microsoft Cloud revenue hit $54.5 billion, a 29% gain, while the company's commercial remaining performance obligations — which include both unearned revenue and future-recognized amounts — reached $627 billion, reflecting a 99% increase year over year.

The More Personal Computing unit, which covers Windows, Xbox, Surface, and Bing search advertising, brought in $13.19 billion, down 1% from last year but above the $12.73 billion expected by Wall Street. Windows licensing revenue fell 2%, Xbox content and services dropped 5%, while search advertising revenue, excluding traffic acquisition costs, rose 12%.

Capital expenditures and finance leases totaled $31.9 billion for the quarter, up 49%, but still below the $34.9 billion analysts expected, according to CNBC. The company’s gross margin was 67.6%, its lowest since 2022, due to higher depreciation from building new data centers.

CFO Amy Hood said in a statement that results exceeded expectations across revenue, operating income, and earnings per share, "reflecting strong execution and growing demand for the Microsoft Cloud."