Lesson for Microsoft and Google: Investing in AI Yields Profit

Lesson for Microsoft and Google: Investing in AI Yields Profit

July 25 (Reuters) – Artificial intelligence is expected​ to pay off big for tech giants including Microsoft (MSFT.O) and Alphabet (GOOGL.O) someday. But expect deeper investments ‍before⁣ gains trickle to‍ the bottom line, the companies said ⁤on Tuesday.

Microsoft said costs rose sharply as it built new data centers to support AI and that capital‌ expenditures will continue to rise as it buys chips from ​the likes of Nvidia Corp (NVDA.O) to power those data ⁣centers.

The Windows maker’s shares were‍ down more than 4% in premarket trading on Wednesday, while Alphabet gained ⁢nearly 7%.

Microsoft is ⁣bearing AI costs in ​two ways, analysts said: ⁤to power its own products‌ such as its forthcoming $30-a-month⁣ Copilot AI assistant, ​and to serve companies wanting to use its Azure ⁢cloud computing services to create AI products.

Microsoft executives said the service will start generating the bulk of its‌ revenue in the second half of its⁣ fiscal ‍2024 ending June 30.

“They’re buying a bunch of H100s,” said Ben Bajarin,⁢ chief⁢ executive and principal analyst of Creative Strategies, referring to‌ Nvidia’s flagship chips for AI.

“You’re probably ‍going to see ⁣a similar thing with Amazon (AMZN.O), if not this quarter then the next quarter, because both of them⁤ are⁢ the clouds that the vast majority of the market is using for training (AI‍ systems) right now.”

Alphabet, however, kept down costs, though not for long. ⁣Chief Financial Officer Ruth Porat, who will become president and chief investment‌ officer, said delays in data center construction are why ⁢second-quarter capex ​was ​lower than expected.

“As far as AI is concerned, while​ Google may have spent upwards of $200 billion on AI investments over the ‌past decade, much of that isn’t necessarily appreciated by users and investors,” said ⁢Scott Kessler, global sector lead for technology media and telecommunications at Third⁢ Bridge.

One advantage Google has,⁢ analysts said, is that it has⁤ its own custom⁢ chip for handling AI work called the Tensor ‌Processor Unit (TPU), which helps​ lower costs.

Microsoft may be “aggressively buying Nvidia ‌chips, given Microsoft‌ does not have⁣ its own silicon as an alternative,” said Atlantic Equities analyst James Cordwell.

But‌ Google conceded that it‌ will⁢ buy chips ‌from other companies​ as well as using its own, and Porat said that​ spending⁣ could⁣ put a drag on profit and growth.

“The message on inflection point ‌was the same,” from Microsoft and Google, said Gene Munster, managing partner at Deepwater‌ Asset Management,⁤ “but the difference was Microsoft investors wanted to see more.”

Reuters Graphics

Reporting by ⁤Stephen Nellis in San Francisco and Akash‍ Sriram in Bengaluru; Additional reporting‍ by Anna Tong and Max Cherney in San‌ Francisco, Yuvraj Malik in Bengaluru, and Greg Bensinger in New York; Editing by Sayantani Ghosh and‌ Richard Chang

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust‍ Principles.

Akash Sriram

Thomson Reuters

Akash reports on technology companies in the United ​States, electric⁢ vehicle companies, and​ the…

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