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  Xbox 360 Division Pushes $165 Million Profit For MS Q3
by Staff [Console/PC, Mobile Phone]
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April 22, 2010
 
Xbox 360 Division Pushes $165 Million Profit For MS Q3

The Entertainment and Devices Division of Microsoft, which includes the Xbox 360, PC games and Zune, showed a $165 million profit on revenues of $1.67 billion for the quarter -- alongside record revenue of $14.5 billion for the company as a whole for that period.

For the first three quarters of the company's current fiscal year, Entertainment and Devices Division revenues are down five percent, to $6.46 billion from $6.68 billion. However, profits are up a tremendous 242%, moving from $249 million for that period of 2009 to $851 million so far in 2010.

The company shipped 8.8 million Xbox 360 consoles during the first nine months of its 2010 fiscal year; 10 million units were shipped in the same period of its fiscal 2009. Revenue per console has dropped thanks to drops in price for the system.

The statement the company released says that, for the quarter, the changes are "primarily reflecting an increase in Xbox Live revenue and non-gaming revenue, offset in part by decreased revenue from Xbox 360 video games and decreased Xbox 360 consoles sold."

Last year, the company shipped Halo Wars in its third quarter, but there was no similar hit title during the same period of this year. Xbox console shipments for the quarter were down, too: 1.5 million versus 1.7 million in the same period of 2009.

While a 22 percent decrease in the cost of manufacturing the Xbox 360 helped trim costs for the company, the cost of operating Xbox Live increased in the period, and R&D efforts were stepped up, increasing by $31 million.

Xbox 360 and PC game revenue decreased by $240 million over the nine month period, says the filing, due primarily to "decreased Xbox 360 consoles sold, decreased revenue per console, and decreased revenue from Xbox 360 video games, offset in part by increased Xbox LIVE revenue." The company has also stepped down marketing efforts for the Xbox 360 console so far this year -- by $60 million, or 6 percent.

The Entertainment and Devices Division also includes Windows Mobile, Microsoft Surface, and other products.

The tech giant as a whole saw revenue of $14.50 billion for the quarter ended Mar. 31, 2010, a 6 percent increase from the same period of the prior year, and $4.01 billion in profits, up 35 percent, thanks to the success of Windows 7's launch, as well as "strong growth in other areas like Bing search, Xbox LIVE and our emerging cloud services," said Peter Klein, chief financial officer at Microsoft.
 
   
 
Comments

Mark Harris
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That's a lot of green. I'm not sure how much revenue Windows Mobile accounts for, but with the release and rabid consumption of the HTC HD2 on Tmobile's network here in the US they are certainly set for growth in that area.

Tim Tavernier
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Remember. This division also accounts for retail sales of Windows since 2009

Yeah...Windows. So all numbers coming from that division must be take with a big grain of salt.

Christian Keichel
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"Remember. This division also accounts for retail sales of Windows since 2009"

Is that so? Never heard of that. If it is the case, the numbers would have to be put in perspective again.
I did a quick google search and found no sign, that Windows retail sales belong to this division, but that doesn't mean anything, cause I saw MS is constantly restructuring this division.
From where do you have this info?

Tim Tavernier
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A gamewebsite called Spong.com had a good look at the yearly earnings of the Xbox Division somewhere end March and found out the division also included retail sales of Windows for that year. I tried searching their site for the exact link but the article was one of their smaller Nibbles and their search engine doesn't seem to include those. Argh. The same website is also pointing out that these numbers of MS do also have some holes in them.

Now I know the bulk of the Windows sales are sold direct to PC manufacturer's but the retail ones still make a very nice profit. Still, the Xbox Division numbers have always been very iffy with MS trying every bookkeeping trick to smuck them up. This is done to convince investors and stockholders to not close down the division (which almost happened in 2004).

Camilo R
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If Windows was included in their entertainment division, then it wouldn't be a mere $165 million. Then where did the $3.8 billion come from?

Their accounting practices are in their 10K. I've never seen Windows included on the entertainment division on any of MS's annual 10K.


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