<p>A big recent move in Microsoft stock has been driven by the speculation that Microsoft will release Office for iPad on March 27, 2014; this was reported by several news sources including Reuters.</p><p>If the speculation is true, there is certainly something to celebrate in that the new CEO, Satya Nadella, is willing to depart from the policies of his predecessor, Steve Ballmer. In spite of the popularity of the iPad, Ballmer refused to make Office available on iPad. In the process, he left billions of dollars in revenue on the table. Only time will tell if Ballmer's reasoning was correct. If Office had been available on iPad from the beginning, Microsoft would have had greater difficulties in adoption of its Surface tablet.</p><p>Bulls are excited about the revenue Microsoft will generate from selling Office for iPad. For example, Ross MacMillan of Jefferies predicts $4 billion of additional annual revenue for Microsoft. However, the exuberance for Microsoft selling Office for iPad may be misplaced.</p><p>First of all, adding $4 billion of annual revenue to Microsoft's $78 billion dollars in revenue is not that significant.</p><p><a href="http://www.forbes.com/sites/nigamarora/2014/03/24/microsoft-office-on-ipad-would-hardly-be-a-game-changer/">Keep reading...</a></p><p>Read also:</p><p><a href="http://mspmentor.net/managed-services/monitoring-msft-office-ipad-onenote-all-more-win-xp">Monitoring MSFT: Office for iPad, OneNote for All, More Win XP</a> (MSPmentor)</p><p><a href="http://topnews.net.nz/content/232665-microsoft-s-office-productivity-suite-coming-ipad">Microsoft's Office productivity suite coming to iPad</a> (TopNews New Zealand)</p><p>Explore: <a href="http://news.google.com/news/more?ncl=dqTYs6iqmtVkaoMLRgDqsd_w4IqzM&authuser=0&ned=us">29 additional articles.</a></p>