Microsoft's costs in focus as fears rise over slow payoff from AI
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[July 29, 2024] By
Aditya Soni
(Reuters) - Microsoft investors will have one big question when the tech
giant reports earnings on Tuesday: has growth in its Azure
cloud-computing business picked up enough to justify the billions of
dollars being spent on artificial intelligence infrastructure?
Widely seen as the front-runner in the race to make money from AI,
thanks to its tie-up with ChatGPT maker OpenAI, Microsoft is expected to
report that Azure's growth stayed steady quarter-over-quarter at about
31% between April and June, according to data from Visible Alpha.
That would be in-line with the company's forecast, but investors are
expecting a bigger contribution from its AI business in the fiscal
fourth quarter after it accounted for 7 percentage points of Azure's
growth in the first three months of the year.
Microsoft's capital spending likely surged about 53% year-over-year to
$13.64 billion in the period, according to 16 analysts polled by LSEG. A
big step up from the $10.95 billion in expenditure it recorded in the
previous quarter.
Fears that runaway spending by tech giants on data centers would yield
little payoff in the short term have dogged the U.S. stock market this
month amid signs that Wall Street may have become too optimistic about
earnings growth.
Shares of Google-parent Alphabet fell more than 5% last week after the
company reported a quarterly capital spending that exceeded estimates by
nearly $1 billion, while the revenue boost from AI integrations remained
modest, sparking a selloff in major tech companies.
Alphabet said its quarterly capital expenditure would stay high for the
rest of 2024 at or above $12 billion.
"Investors will be very focused on Microsoft's ability to continue to
accelerate revenue growth, especially the portion related to AI. If
revenue acceleration doesn't materialize and increases in capex
continue, investors may be disappointed," said Gil Luria, senior
software analyst at D.A. Davidson.
Microsoft has said it needs to spend on data centers now to overcome the
capacity constraints that are hampering its ability to capitalize on AI
demand.
Its view echoes that of other tech companies, including Alphabet. The
Google parent's CEO, Sundar Pichai, said last week that "risk of
under-investing (in AI infrastructure) is dramatically greater than the
risk of over-investing."
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A view shows a Microsoft logo at Microsoft offices in
Issy-les-Moulineaux near Paris, France, March 25, 2024.
REUTERS/Gonzalo Fuentes//File Photo
'WELL POSITIONED'
The spending surge has allowed Microsoft to court more business from
its large enterprise client base by offering expanded access to its
AI cloud service and rolling out features such as its 365 Copilot
assistant for Word and Excel.
Microsoft has said the $30-per-month Copilot service, which can
summarize heaps of emails into a few bullet points or speedily
complete lines of computer code, is used by half of the Fortune 500
companies.
The Redmond, Washington-based tech giant is, however, yet to
disclose the revenue contribution from the service, and analysts
believe Copilot's impact will be more apparent in the back half of
calendar year 2024.
"While a lot of focus has been on consumer-facing applications like
ChatGPT, (generative AI) is potentially a larger opportunity for
enterprise and Microsoft is just incredibly well positioned to
capitalize on their install base," said Igor Tishin, analyst at
Harding Loevner, a $55 billion asset manager that counts Microsoft
and Alphabet among its largest holdings.
Microsoft shares have risen about 13% this year, adding more than
$350 billion to the company's market value. The stock hit a record
high on July 5, but has dipped nearly 9% in the recent tech selloff.
It has underperformed a 14.5% rise in the S&P 500 this year.
The company is expected to post a 14.6% increase in overall revenue
for the April-June period, compared with 17% growth in the previous
quarter.
That is mostly down to slower growth in its personal computing
business that includes Windows and the Xbox gaming division. The
productivity business - home to the Office suite of apps, LinkedIn
and 365 Copilot - is expected to post growth of about 10%.
(Reporting by Aditya Soni in Bengaluru; Editing by Sayantani Ghosh
and Shinjini Ganguli)
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