Whatâs going on here? Microsoft and Alphabet both announced expectation-beating quarterly revenue on Tuesday, even though the firmsâ cloud divisions broke away from each other. What does this mean? Microsoft flew past Wall Streetâs projections when it reported results late on Tuesday, announcing that revenue came in just above $56 billion last quarter, 13% higher than the same time last year. That was mainly down to strong showings in the tech titanâs Azure cloud computing division and office software businesses. Alphabet will be envious of that, mind you. The cloud sector over at Googleâs parent company fell short of estimates, mustering up a roughly 22% uptick over the quarter versus 28% the one before. Why should I care? For markets: Big Tech, bigger expectations. Investors expect a lot from Big Tech, which means major companies are measured against lofty targets. Microsoftâs banking on artificial intelligence (AI) to smarten up business in the long term, which explains why the firmâs poured cash into ChatGPTâs creator OpenAI and got to work on its own chatbot. Looks like thatâs already paying off: those AI-assisted quarterly results will have comforted investorsâ worries that the cloud business â Microsoftâs biggest moneymaker â might be running out of steam, and given them more reason to trust the tech firmâs master plan. The bigger picture: Itâs nice for some. Alphabet may have had issues with its cloud business, but the company can comfort itself with promising digital advertising results. Thatâll bode well for rivals like Meta, Amazon, and Pinterest too, suggesting that companies are still willing and able to splash out on ads on social media sites. So far, so good for Big Tech, then: while plenty of businesses have been all but wiped out by market conditions and high interest rates, major tech companies have managed to hold relatively steady. And sure, they may come under fire if their AI endeavors still arenât bearing fruit next year, but if you believe that stock-squashing interest rates have topped out, then thereâs no reason to doubt Big Techâs power going forward. |