AI spending worries cast gloom over Alphabet, Microsoft
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[April 25, 2024] By
Sheila Dang
(Reuters) - Investors appear to be losing patience with Big Tech's
prodigious artificial intelligence investments this week after Meta
Platforms signaled deeper spending and a long road to profitability.
The concession from Meta in its quarterly report late on Wednesday cast
a cloud over Microsoft and Alphabet, which will both report quarterly
earnings on Thursday.
Meta's stock sank 15% in extended trade after it forecast higher AI
spending next year, while Microsoft was down 2%, Alphabet fell 3% and
Nvidia dropped 1.4% in reaction.
Wall Street's heavyweight tech-related companies have been locked in a
fierce battle to advance generative AI, which can create text, videos
and photos from prompts and is seen as the next frontier in tech.
During Meta's earnings conference call, analysts peppered CEO Mark
Zuckerberg with questions about how the company was pacing its AI
investments. One analyst asked whether Meta was spending more because it
saw an even bigger opportunity from AI.
"I think we've gotten more ambitious and optimistic on AI," Zuckerberg
responded, pointing to Meta's recent launches of new AI models. "So all
of that basically encourages me to make sure that we're investing to
stay at the leading edge of this."
Alphabet and Microsoft both said earlier this year when they reported
fourth-quarter results that they expected rising AI costs. The investor
reaction on Wednesday indicated deepening concerns.
In a research note on Monday about Alphabet, analysts from New Street
Research said the potential for materially higher capital expenditures
was a worry ahead of results on Thursday.
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Google, Microsoft and Alphabet logos and AI Artificial Intelligence
words are seen in this illustration taken, May 4, 2023. REUTERS/Dado
Ruvic/Illustration
The research firm said it now expects Alphabet's full-year capital
expenditures to be $45.9 billion, up from its previous estimate of
$42.7 billion.
Google has been working to catch up in the generative AI race and
released Gemini, a model that can understand and create different
types of information including text, audio and video.
Creating content with generative AI is energy-intensive, and
Zuckerberg cited the cost as a reason for Meta's higher expenses.
Meanwhile, Microsoft has positioned itself to be a winner in AI due
to its partnership with OpenAI, which kicked off the generative AI
craze last year with ChatGPT, said analysts from Jefferies in a note
on March 31.
Microsoft has integrated chatbots into its suite of Office products
and is planning to invest more in data centers.
Industry-wide, shareholders are now focused on looking for revenue,
including pricing models and whether customers can find use cases
that justify the cost of generative AI, Jefferies wrote.
"Last year was spent dreaming of gen AI's potential," the analysts
wrote. "This year will be about moving forward with concrete steps."
(Reporting by Sheila Dang in Austin; additional reporting by Yuvraj
Malik; Editing by Leslie Adler)
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