Salesforce.com showed on Wednesday that cloud computing can produce serious money, but also that it is not immune from the current unpleasant economic climate.
For its fiscal 2009, which ended on 31 January, the San Francisco-based company reported revenue of $1.08bn (£760m), a 44 percent increase. But for fiscal 2010, it lowered its forecast to a range of $1.3bn to $1.33bn.
In November, the company had forecast $1.35bn to $1.36bn, and analysts surveyed by Thomson Reuters expect on average $1.325bn for the year.
"We've slightly lowered the guidance range. There's increasing uncertainty out there," chief financial officer Graham Smith said on the company's conference call.
For the company's fourth quarter, Salesforce.com reported net income of $13.8m, or 11 cents per share, on revenue of $290m. That compared with $7.4m net income and $217m revenue for the year-earlier quarter, and it was better than the seven cents per share on $285m in revenue analysts expected.
In after-hours trading, Salesforce.com's stock rose $1.50, or five percent, to $29.60.
The company competes chiefly with Oracle's Siebel software for customer relationship management, which typically is run on massive computers a company runs on its own.
Salesforce.com has been branching out, however, offering its Force.com system to let companies build their own custom web-based applications or third-party programmers offer their own extensions to those customers. And in December, the company launched Force.com Sites to house customer's websites.
In the fourth quarter, Salesforce.com's technology overall completed more than 12 billion transactions, the company said. The total of more than 1,500 Force.com Sites received more than 15 million page views in the quarter, and there are 166 applications available in the Force.com AppExchange.
"The numbers for the fourth quarter clearly demonstrate increasing adoption of the Force.com platform," chief executive Marc Benioff said in the conference call.






