3 Cloud Computing Stocks for Every Equity Investor

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The cloud is a remote environment where computing power and data storage are hosted and software applications are served remotely via the internet. And while some investors might consider investing in cloud stocks risky because the technology is relatively new, there are three relatively stable cloud computing stocks worth a closer look.

Microsoft is transitioning its business from PCs to the cloud

Microsoft (NASDAQ: MSFT) is one of the most valuable companies in the world, with a market cap of over $1 trillion (yes, with a "t"). The company, once best known for the operating system installed on personal computers, began transitioning to the cloud as PC sales slowed with the proliferation of mobile devices.

An artist's imagination of the cloud.
An artist's imagination of the cloud.

Image Source: Getty Images

Today, Microsoft's Azure unit is one of cloud computing's largest Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS) offerings. For the year ended June 30, 2019, Azure's revenue grew 64%. According to Microsoft, Azure has an "unlimited [Total Addressable Market]." It represents about a third of Microsoft's revenue and contributes largely to the company's 69% gross margin.

Microsoft boasts a low debt-equity ratio of 0.71 and has more than $11 billion in cash. Its balance sheet is rock solid. It generates more than $3.00 per share in free cash flow annually; more than 1.5 times its dividend payout. Microsoft has paid a quarterly dividend since 2003 and has grown it at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 10.41%. The yield is approximately 1.3%.

Oracle's current customers are its primary growth opportunity

Oracle (NYSE: ORCL) is the leading database software company in the world with a market cap of more than $178 billion. Its more than 430,000 customers worldwide represent its biggest growth opportunity. Oracle is rapidly converting many of these "on-premise" (i.e., software is hosted locally, not delivered through the cloud) customers to a Software as a Service (SaaS) model, which translates into a three-fold revenue multiplier for Oracle.

This customer conversion helped Oracle generate a nearly 80% gross margin in the year ended May 31, 2019 and gives it another great growth opportunity. Many of those customers run back-office business applications that are not Oracle products. As customers transition their Oracle applications to the cloud, Oracle also aids them in converting those other back-office applications, replacing them with Oracle products. If just a fraction of those customers switch to an Oracle product, Oracle stands to book an additional $21 billion in revenue.