Silent_Buddha
Legend
The lack of transparency is why these questions get raised all the time. There is an easy answer: the be more transparent about these parts of Microsoft's business. As as I said in an earlier post, if nothing else comes of this it should result in a shareholder direction that Microsoft needs to include more information in their financial reports about how these sizeable investments are paying over over time. I.e. we may actually get some real data about Microsoft's Xbox business. After 20+ years.
Unfortunately shareholders generally only really care about the minutiae if the corporation is losing money, flirting with the possibility of losing money (small profits relative to revenue) or alternately making money or losing money depending on the year.
If the corporation is consistently making money hand over fist year after year and shareholders are getting good value for their shares, then they often only care about the broad strokes of a corporation's strategy and trust the company to handle the minutiae.
As long as MS continues to make bucketloads of profit year after year, shareholders are unlikely to start pestering them to release more information.
And as a result, MS will continue to use profitable divisions to hide the losses generated by unprofitable ventures ... when possible. Sometimes, it's not possible.
Regards,
SB