Investor Roger McNamee had a fascinating interview this morning on CNBC in which he predicted Microsoft's Windows is a dying business.
"I think Microsoft Windows, this is the cycle where it stops growing," he said.
"The availability of iPads and smartphones is allowing corporations to trade down and eliminate the thousand dollars per year of supporting a Windows Hp 510 battery Hp dv6000 battery desktop. And this is the year where windows has fallen below 50% of internet connected device down from 97% a few years ago."
He may be right -- PC sales are dipping and the recovery will be harder thanks to the rise of the iPad. Or, there's always a chance Steve Ballmer and Microsoft will stage a spectacular comeback with Windows Phone Windows 8 and end up owning the mobile and tablet markets in 2020 anyway.
But here's the weird part: McNamee thinks Windows is dying, but he'd buy Microsoft anyway because of the company's strong position in email.
"When you're a monopolist in an important category -- and they are for sure a monopolist relative to email with Exchange -- they're going to be able to crank prices on Exchange. I actually think Microsoft is a buy."
McNamee is a smart guy -- Bill Gates once credited him as a sounding board for his 1994 book "The Road Ahead" -- and has made some great investment decisions over the years, like taking an early huge stake in Facebook for Elevation Partners.
But imagining that Exchange as a replacement for the Windows business just bizarre for a bunch of reasons:
* Market share. Exchange Server has majority market share -- most estimates put it above 70%, and higher in larger enterprises. But it doesn't have the 90%+ share that Microsoft Hp hstnn-db42 battery Hp pavilion dv6 battery has enjoyed with Windows (and DOS before it) for the last 20-plus years.
* Sales. Windows had about $18 billion in sales last year. The last time Microsoft revealed Exchange numbers was FY'07, when it had sales of $1.5 billion and a compound annual growth rate of 27%. Even assuming that rate remained constant -- which it almost certainly did NOT during the recession of 2008 and 2009 -- Exchange would have had $2.8 billion in sales in FY'10.
* Margins. Windows has one of the greatest operating margins of any legal business in history -- consistently above 70%, and occasionally topping 80%. Exchange sells in lower volumes, faces more competition, and requires longer and more personalized sales cycles, which almost certainly means it's got lower margins.
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* Competition. Older on-premise messaging systems like Lotus are slowly dying, but Exchange faces serious price pressure from Web-based email providers, particularly Google's Gmail. Microsoft has responded with Exchange Online, its own hosted service, but it's already had to lower prices on the service once.
* Strategy. Windows pulls through sales of Office and other desktop software, which in turn pulls through sales of business servers (including Exchange). Its ubiquity helps Microsoft sell Windows Server and other enterprise software. Its huge margins allow Microsoft to pour money into projects like search and Xbox, which pressure the competition.
If Windows dies, Microsoft will have do do a lot more than monopolize email to replace it.
McNamee was much more bearish about Intel and PC makers, saying the switch from the PC "is going to be brutal on them."
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