Apple ($AAPL) is getting most of the attention this morning due to its earnings release late yesterday. Two weeks ago, I asked “Is it time to dump Apple,” and I think the answer is increasingly “yes.” Though the company remains wildly profitable, earnings missed estimates this quarter, and there is a sneaking realization that Apple’s competitors are catching up.
But today, it’s not Apple I want to talk about. It’s Apple’s erstwhile PC rival Microsoft ($MSFT).
Microsoft was the undisputed winner of the PC era, but the company hasn’t quite found its way in the era of Web 2.0 and social media. The smartphone war is down to two main combatants in software—Apple and Google ($GOOG)—and two in hardware—Apple again and Samsung. And despite coming out with a tablet years before anyone else, Microsoft has been left behind on this front as well.
Things are about to change. With the long-awaited release of Windows 8, Microsoft is making a real push into the world of touchscreens and tablets.
Apple launched the first offensive in the smartphone and tablet wars, but in a long-term war of attrition it is doomed to lose for the same reasons that it lost the original PC war. Apple has always maintained a closed ecosystem and insists on making its own hardware and software. Steve Jobs’ pigheadedness is the reason why it was the Wintel platform and not the Mac that came to dominate the desktop and laptop markets.
It’s all happening again. Apple again jumped out to a huge lead, but it will lose the war in the end.
And what about Google? I like Google and I personally use an Android phone. But I believe that in a long war it is Microsoft that will win. I question whether Google really takes Android seriously. It’s a free product that generates revenues only indirectly by encouraging mobile web browsing via Google’s search engine. Meanwhile, Microsoft knows how to manage corporate clients, and corporate IT departments are comfortable with Microsoft products to a degree that they will never be with Google or Apple.
As a value investor, I often get into trades too early. Not matter how I might try to game myself to avoid this, it seems to be hardwired into my DNA as an investor. So it’s entirely possible that I am early this time as well.
That’s ok. If Microsoft takes longer than I expect to rise to the top, we still get to collect its 3.3% dividend and benefit from owning one of the cheapest major blue chip stocks in the world.
Microsoft is a buy.
This article first appeared on TraderPlanet.
Disclosures: Sizemore Capital is long MSFT. Get Sizemore Insights delivered to your e-mail FREE.
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Either you are trying to push MSFT price up so you can bail out or you are seriously delusional. Industry has tired of MSFT’s high software prices and the 20 somethings are mostly Apple with a good percentage of Android. MSFT won the early PC game largely on the back of IBM. Back then nobody got fired for going with IBM. MSFT has yet to prove that they can build a desirable product. But they have proven that they have no ability to innovate and they have proven that they can produce many products no one cares about. And finally, MSFT is led by Ballmer. Enough said!
[…] by others. (On a side note, I expect that Windows Phone will eventually be another success that Microsoft snipes from Apple. Time will tell; for now Windows Phone is off to a modest […]
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