Microsoft’s revenues rose 16 percent to $65.6 billion (£50.1bn) in its fiscal first quarter ended in September, beating analysts’ estimates, as the company sought to show that its heavy investments into artificial intelligence (AI) are paying off.
Under a new structure for financial reporting, the firm said revenue from Azure and other cloud services grew by 33 percent, similar to gains posted by competitor Google a day earlier.
Google said its cloud business saw a nearly 35 percent year-on-year growth in cloud revenues for the quarter to $11.35bn, beating analysts’ estimates.
Microsoft’s shares rose in after-hours trading.
“AI-driven transformation is changing work, work artifacts, and workflow across every role, function, and business process,” chief executive Satya Nadella said in a statement.
“We are expanding our opportunity and winning new customers as we help them apply our AI platforms and tools to drive new growth and operating leverage.”
The firm said capital expenditures rose 5.3 percent to $20bn for the quarter, compared to $19bn in the previous quarter, as it invests billions into data centre expansion.
Big tech companies including Microsoft, Google, Meta, Amazon and others are placing a huge bet on generative AI, an expensive technology that carries risks including rising costs per customer.
Sharply rising energy demands are another factor, one Microsoft has been seeking to allay with an effort to restart the Three Mile Island nuclear power plant that was the site of the US’ biggest nuclear accident in 1979.
Google and Amazon have also signed nuclear deals to secure power for their data centres.
Investor excitement over the technology has led to huge stock-market gains for those companies, but Microsoft has not been one of the biggest beneficiaries.
Its shares have risen around 16 percent this year, compared to 68 percent for Meta and 28 percent for Amazon, while AI chip maker Nvidia has seen its shares rise nearly 190 percent this year.
Investors have shown increasing caution around the biggest tech companies, Alphabet, Amazon, Apple, Meta, Microsoft, Nvidia and Tesla, which represent about one-fifth of the S&P 500 but have collectively trailed the market for the past three months.
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