Analysts revisit Microsoft stock price targets after Q1 earnings

In This Article:

Updated at 10:41 AM EDT

Microsoft shares fell sharply in early Thursday trading, dragging tech rivals and major benchmarks lower, after the AI market pioneer hinted that its near-term ambitions for the new technology may be clouded by the costs and timing to bring them online.

Microsoft  (MSFT) , which lost its place as the world's biggest tech company to Apple  (AAPL)  earlier this year, and slipped below Nvidia  (NVDA)  over the past few months, has been one of the worst-performing Magnificent 7 stocks in 2024, rising just 16.6% and trailing the 26% gain for the Nasdaq benchmark.

That disappointing performance belies that fact that Microsoft, through its partnership with ChatGPT creator OpenAI, has been at the forefront of the AI investment wave for much of the past two years, with plans to infuse the new technologies across its suite of consumer and business products.

"AI-driven transformation is changing work, work artifacts and workflow across every role, function, and business process, helping customers drive new growth and operating leverage," CEO Satya Nadella told investors on a conference call late Wednesday.

 Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella says the group's AI business is "on track to surpass $10 billion of annual revenue run rate" in the current quarter.<p>TheStreet&sol;Shutterstock&sol;Justin Sullivan&sol;Getty Images</p>
Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella says the group's AI business is "on track to surpass $10 billion of annual revenue run rate" in the current quarter.

TheStreet/Shutterstock/Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

"All up, our AI business is on track to surpass an annual revenue run rate of $10 billion next quarter, which will make it the fastest business in our history to reach this milestone," he added.

Microsoft capital spending surges

Those plans have come at a hefty cost, however, with Microsoft spending $55.4 billion last year to expand both its physical AI infrastructure and purchase the tens of thousands of chips and processors needed to power the energy-consuming technology.

That tally is likely to rise to around $80 billion for its current financial year, analyst estimate, and Microsoft has already laid out $20 billion over the three months ended in September, the group's fiscal first quarter.

Investors aren't seeing the kind of payoff as yet to justify that kind of outlay, however, and are looking to punish the stock for even a slight miss to Wall Street forecasts.

Related: Meta earnings blast forecasts, but Facebook parent sees big capex increase

Microsoft posted first-quarter earnings of $3.30 per share under its new reporting structure, topping Wall Street's consensus estimate of $3.10 per share, while overall revenue rose 16% to $65.6 billion.

Growth in the group's flagship Azure cloud division, the epicenter of its AI ambitions, however, came in modestly shy of Wall Street's outlook, with a 33% expansion, and will likely slow modestly into the final three months of the year.