Microsoft, Meta to Feel AI Scrutiny as Investors Wait for Payoff

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(Bloomberg) -- Ever-growing scrutiny from investors over when the billions spent on artificial intelligence will flow through to sales and profit is set to dominate when Microsoft Corp. and Meta Platforms Inc. report earnings later Wednesday.

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Capital expenditure at Microsoft is estimated at about $14.6 billion in the last quarter, a jump of more than 45% from a year earlier, according to estimates compiled by Bloomberg. At Meta, spending is projected to have soared by almost 70% to $11 billion.

“There’s been an enormous amount of capital spent on developing AI — we’re actually looking very specifically to see who is monetizing it, who’s actually giving a return on investment and what does it look like,” said Brian Mulberry, client portfolio manager at Zacks Investment Management.

Shares of Microsoft were up about 0.8% Wednesday in afternoon trading in New York. Meta shares were up about 0.3%.

Investors have turned cautious toward megacap technology names, given the enormous spending on AI, pricey valuations and slowing earnings growth that are testing the group’s status as market leaders. A gauge of the Magnificent Seven tech megacap stocks tracked by Bloomberg has struggled to regain its July highs.

“You have to show that your massive Capex investments in AI are actually driving revenues and guidance,” said Paul Marino, chief revenue officer at Themes ETFs. “And if you could do those things, I think you’re gonna be highly successful.”

The push for answers may be greater among Microsoft investors. The stock is the second-worst performer of the Mag 7, beating out only Tesla Inc. this year and underperforming the S&P 500 Index.

The shares have struggled for momentum as the market weighs the outlays on AI against slowing revenue gains for Microsoft’s Azure cloud-computing service. Revenue is tipped to creep just 1% higher from a year earlier, on a constant-currency basis. Last quarter, faltering sales growth at Azure hit Microsoft stock.

Heightened investor anxiety is “understandable” given how rapidly capex on AI infrastructure has ramped up this year, Piper Sandler analysts led by Brent Bracelin wrote in an Oct. 22 note.

Still, they see the risk that Microsoft will overspend on AI as limited by the investments it’s already made in buildings and land. Plus, its strong operating cash flow gives the company “flexibility to aggressively invest while increasing EPS and capital returns,” Bracelin said.