:Investors punished Microsoft with a 4 per cent share drop on Thursday as hefty AI bets failed to drive a big increase in its cloud revenue, while Meta rose 2 per cent after CEO Mark Zuckerberg assured Wall Street about growth with promises of a “really big year”.
The chief executives of both the companies defended their heavy investments on artificial intelligence on Wednesday, days after Chinese upstart DeepSeek unveiled a breakthrough in cheap AI that shook the technology industry.
But while Meta has consistently showed strong ad revenues – a move that “easily justifies” its investments according to Evercore analyst Mark Mahaney – Microsoft’s key cloud business Azure has been slowing down.
The Windows maker missed market estimates for quarterly revenue growth at Azure and gave a third-quarter forecast for the business that was below expectations, even after it promised a rebound for the unit in the second half of its fiscal year.
“The second-half re-acceleration story for Azure is not playing out,” Barclays analyst Raimo Lenschow said.
“The company overly focused on AI workloads at the expense of core Azure. It will take time to fix this, which means the Azure growth acceleration the market had been hoping for has to wait for a little longer.”
For Facebook-parent Meta, a better-than-expected 21 per cent jump in revenue helped ease investor fears around Zuckerberg’s plans to spend as much as $65 billion this year on AI, even as its first-quarter forecast was muted.
“Nobody is more bulled up on AI than Meta. And Meta might have more benefits to show from AI than anyone,” Rosenblatt analyst Barton Crockett wrote.
At least 15 brokerages raised their price targets on Meta, which has a 12-month forward price-to-earnings ratio of about 26.22. The stock jumped 65 per cent last year, the biggest gain among Big Tech peers. The company looked set to add $29 billion to its market value of $1.71 trillion on Thursday.
“Meta’s ability to use AI to sustainably drive both engagement and pricing growth is a rarity in its (and the industry’s) history,” MoffettNathanson analysts said.
Microsoft was on track to erase about $136 billion off its $3.29 trillion market cap. About four brokerages trimmed their price targets on the stock, which has lagged its peers with just a 12 per cent gain last year.
Microsoft “did not recommit to (its Azure second-half outlook) the same way that it did 90 days ago. The Azure-acceleration story has been hit by shrapnel and is losing altitude,” J.P. Morgan analyst Mark Murphy said.