Investors punish Microsoft, Alphabet as AI returns fall short of lofty expectations

Investors punish Microsoft, Alphabet as AI returns fall short of lofty expectations

Technology

Investors punish Microsoft, Alphabet as AI returns fall short of lofty expectations

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(Reuters) - Tech giants on Tuesday talked up how customers are lapping up their generative AI-powered products, but mounting costs of developing the cutting-edge features irked investors hoping for a big boost to sales from the new technology.

Alphabet (GOOGL.O), opens new tab shares fell nearly 6% in premarket trading, while those of Microsoft (MSFT.O), opens new tab were down about 1%, bringing down heavyweight tech stocks including Apple (AAPL.O), opens new tab, Meta (META.O), opens new tab and Amazon (AMZN.O), opens new tab.

Both Microsoft and Alphabet reported generous increases to their cloud revenue in the December quarter, beating Wall Street estimates, as customers lined up to test new AI features and build their own AI services.

But costs surged as well, highlighting the heavy investments these companies are making in servers, data centers and research as they compete fiercely for new customer dollars.

This hurt investor expectations that were fueled by the promise of AI, which powered a stock rally to record highs in recent months.

"A lofty valuation means even the slightest hint of disappointment will be seized on by investors, and Microsoft's guidance for revenue growth in its cloud division to slacken a little in the current quarter was enough to see the shares dip modestly," said Russ Mould, investment director at AJ Bell.

Google and Microsoft's stock drop has put them on track to lose about $59 billion and $28 billion in market value, respectively.

Alphabet's shares, which rose 58% in 2023, were trading at 22.26 times expected earnings, compared with a forward PE of 33.09 for Microsoft, 22.46 for Meta, 42.60 for Amazon and 27.73 for Apple.

Gene Munster, a managing partner at Deepwater Asset Management, said he is looking for more from his firm's stakes in Alphabet and Microsoft.

"Investors want to see more contribution from AI," he said about Alphabet. "Microsoft is still nascent, but showing some AI uptick."

Shares of chipmaker AMD (AMD.O), opens new tab, which boosted its 2024 forecast for AI processors to $3.5 billion on Tuesday, fell 6%. Analysts had previously expected AMD to sell $4 billion to $8 billion worth of AI chips, said Summit Insights analyst Kinngai Chan, adding the stock's valuation is also pegged to those figures.

Alphabet's capital expenditure in the reported quarter shot up 45% to $11 billion. Meanwhile, Chief Financial Officer Ruth Porat said spending would be notably larger this year than 2023.

"The only problem here is that Google reported earnings the same night as Microsoft ... (it is) hard to get that AI multiple pixie dust if larger cloud players are growing faster off of larger revenues," Bernstein analysts wrote in a note.

Microsoft also reported a 69% jump in capital expenditure to $11.5 billion and said it expects the metric to "increase materially" on a sequential basis.

"By providing a positive outlook ... (Microsoft) gave investors just enough to justify the current share price, but will need to continue to deliver on its growth trajectory in order to justify an even higher share price," said Gil Luria, analyst at D.A. Davidson.