Parsing Microsoft’s Massive 42% Gain In 2013

Microsoft, a company that has suffered from a flat stock price since I was in middle school, is in the midst of a surprisingly strong year. A quick scan of its long-term stock chart indicates that the company is trading higher right now than at any time since 2000. It’s up 41.93 percent this year, having risen to $37.91 in mid-day trading this fine Thursday from $26.71 at the close of December 31, 2012. So what’s going on?

It’s not a simple story, but when you piece together a few key moments for the company this year the narrative is almost parsable. We’ve seen a massive Surface charge, a sliding PC market, and declining Windows OEM revenue. On the other hand, strong Office revenue, new billion-dollar businesses, the announcement of an impending CEO change and a re-org have given the company a new wind.

Microsoft’s stock, year to date, chart via Yahoo:

2013, So Far

What follows is a rolling, chronological list of some of the events that drove Microsoft’s stock price higher and lower this year.

We have now reached what I think we can jokingly call the Era of Hokum: Analysts talking about breaking up Microsoft. Pundits, leaks, purported Elop opinions and the like send Microsoft higher as short-term investors pile in, in hopes of a bang. They got one — for now.

We can’t solve chaos theory in this post, and the Efficient Market hypothesis is bullshit — the above is only the Cliff’s Notes of a Russian novel-esque year for Microsoft.

The gist is that after a long holding period, Microsoft is making a successive parade of large moves that are reforming the company. New enterprise products. New business model. New devices. New consumer services. New executive structure. New CEO. It’s what you could have prescribed for a company that was long a market leader, but at the same had watched its preeminence be slowly ground out by more nimble rivals that invented new product categories as it played catch up again and again. Losing, most of the time, as we know.

We can’t leave a post like this without asking the best question: Is Microsoft now overvalued? According to Yahoo Finance (these numbers, I believe, are using a non-diluted share count, so watch out), has a five-year forward PE of 13. That’s fine. But Yahoo also reports that Microsoft’s current PEG ratio is almost two. Put more simply: Microsoft can beat market expectations by growing at truly moderate ranges. But the market expects them not to. Therefore, the recent rally in Microsoft’s stock is somewhat contrary to investor growth expectations. Something has to give.

That said, Microsoft doesn’t feel too richly valued for a company with its cash position, dividend and share repurchase program, and quarterly net income. Whether it has more room to run is something for you to decide.

Top Image Credit: Flickr

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