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Looking to buy Microsoft

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Everybody's back to hating Mr. Softie.

But this time the Redmond beast is feeling heat from investors and analysts and not from regulators looking to inhibit the bundling of software or consumers cursing security flaws or the bugginess of Windows.

Yep, now it is investors who are expressing their ire over quarterly financial performance and future guidance which, for the first time, overtly accounts for the piles of cash that must be spent building server farms among other things in order to meet the Google challenge. And such dissatisfaction is coldly evident in the recent price decline of 15% in five trading days since the release.

While negative investor sentiment accelerates, it becomes extremely easy to come up with reasons to avoid if you are not long and to sell if you are. Guidance is punk. Google is swarming. Apple circling. The Vista release has been pushed ever further out into the future -- so on and so forth ad nauseam.

Investors who have held Microsoft for years have little to show for it. And in a way, the long term stock price flat line  is strangely symbolic of the complacency that has pervaded the company in many areas save the dogged tenacity it has displayed going after Sony's Playstation. Perhaps, the competition and whiff of desperation is exactly what the beast needs to stir itself and don the ruthless aggression which made it, for a time, the largest company on Earth. 

And as the bearish consensus solidifies, fewer will bring themselves to focus on significant positives. For one, the stock is significantly cheaper than it was a week ago(surely you recall the quaint mantra "buy low"). The company is earmarking money for future growth which is a hint of optimism as Gates and Ballmer could simply decide to divvy up another one time pay out -- a move that smacks of the nothing better to do with it rag. It has hired some of the best people recently including Ray Ozzie who has been publically vocal about the changes which must be made. It generates a ton of cash and has the financial wherewithal for the coming the present war of attrition.

There's a great scene in the movie Caddyshack where Al Czervik (Rodney Dangerfield) standing on the golf course says to his broker on the phone, "Everybody's buying? sell sell! Everybody's selling, then buy buy!" 

Presently, Microsoft is getting no respect from investors. And as this selling reaches a climax down here in the low 20's, it becomes attractive.

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Last updated: November 14, 2009: 01:17 PM

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