Home Finance & Business Moroccan IT Firm Microdata’s Sales Jump to Nearly 1bn Dirhams in 2025

Moroccan IT Firm Microdata’s Sales Jump to Nearly 1bn Dirhams in 2025

Moroccan IT company Microdata had a strong year in 2025, helped by big technology projects and the country’s move towards more digital services.
Moroccan IT company Microdata had a strong year in 2025, helped by big technology projects and the country’s move towards more digital services.

Moroccan IT company Microdata had a strong year in 2025, helped by big technology projects and the country’s move towards more digital services.

At a board meeting on 18 March, led by Hassane Amor, the company reported revenue of 979.4 million dirhams, up 8.7% compared with 2024. Operating profit rose 10.5% to 106.7 million dirhams, while net profit grew 2.5% to 69.5 million dirhams, even though financial results dropped slightly.

The growth came from Microdata’s work on large IT infrastructure projects and investments in data management, cloud computing, and early artificial intelligence applications.

Microdata’s subsidiary DGSM is still not included in the main accounts. The unit is small and contributed less than 1.5% of group net profit in 2025. DGSM lets the company test new service areas without affecting the parent company’s finances.

Microdata has been a leader in Morocco’s IT market for over 30 years. It works with global companies like Dell, HP, and Microsoft, giving it the ability to handle big and complex projects that smaller firms can’t manage.

The company’s 2025 growth also reflects wider changes in Morocco. There’s been a push for local cloud hosting to meet data laws, growing demand for cybersecurity, and early use of artificial intelligence. While AI projects are still new, Microdata invested in the systems needed to run them.

The board said it will recommend keeping the dividend at 40 dirhams per share, the same as last year. They are confident the company can continue growing and stay profitable in the coming years.

Microdata is known on the Casablanca Stock Exchange as a “yield stock,” focusing on steady dividends while funding operations from cash flow instead of taking on debt.

Exit mobile version