Microsoft's shares jump over news of iPad version of Office software suite

Microsoft's shares scaled levels last seen in the dotcom boom following reports that the company plans to unveil an iPad version of its Office software suite, potentially generating billions of dollars in revenue.

Reuters reported late on Monday that new Microsoft Chief Executive Satya Nadella would unveil the iPad app at an event on March 27.

The event will be Nadella's first major public appearance since his appointment last month.

Microsoft shares rose as much as 5 percent to $39.90 on Tuesday, adding $15 billion to the company's market value. At that price, the stock was up about 10 percent since the announcement of Nadella's appointment on February 4. The shares last touched $40 in July 2000.

Microsoft has had iPad and iPhone versions of Office primed for several months now, sources told Reuters, but the company has dallied on their release due to internal divisions, among other things.

Analysts said the lack of an Office version for the iPad may have robbed Microsoft of billions of dollars in revenue. (Reuters Insider: reut.rs/1gC77rr)

"We estimate that if 10 percent of the iPad install base were to subscribe to Office then this could add 15 million subscribers and generate $1.1 billion to $1.5 billion in consumer Office subscription revenue per year," Bernstein Research analyst Mark Moerdler said in a note on Tuesday.

Investors have for years urged Microsoft to adapt Office, its most profitable product, for iPhones and iPads and devices using Google Inc's Android software rather than shackling it to Windows as PC sales decline.

Microsoft's productivity tools remain the industry standard in offices, but America's employees are increasingly using smartphone and tablets to supplement their work.

Tired of waiting for Office to be optimized for their touchscreen devices, a growing contingent of younger companies are turning to cheaper touch-friendly apps that can perform word processing and other tasks in the cloud.

Barclays analyst Raimo Lenschow said the plan to launch the iPad app would signal that Microsoft is moving towards a more serious cross-platform strategy.

Bernstein's Moerdler said he did not believe that the app would have any significant positive or negative impact on Microsoft's Windows franchise as most corporate customers use Windows.

Microsoft already offers Office Online on its Windows smartphones and as a free Web-based version.

Google Inc has been making inroads into Microsoft's Office software business with its free Google Drive application, which includes spreadsheets, presentation and word-processing tools.

Last year, Apple offered free updates for life on its iWork business software, which includes rival applications to Microsoft's Excel, Word and PowerPoint, for MacBooks, Mac computers and iPad.

Apple also said today it would offer an iPad 4 tablet in place of the mid-range iPad 2 at the same price.

Tablets based on Apple's iOS platform held 36 percent share of the market in 2013, trailing those based on Google's Android software that had 62 percent share, according to research firm Gartner.

Microsoft shares were trading up 4 percent at $39.60 in midday trading on the Nasdaq.

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