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Microsoft (MSFT)

Shares in Microsoft were more than 3% in the red in pre-market trading on Thursday morning, despite the tech company posting quarterly results that beat expectations after the close on Wednesday.

In its fiscal first quarter, Microsoft reported earnings per share of $3.30 (£2.54), which was ahead of analyst forecasts of $3.10, according to consensus estimates compiled by Bloomberg. Revenue of $65.6bn also topped expectations of $64.5bn.

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These figures were also up compared with the same quarter last year, when Microsoft posted earnings per share of $2.99 and revenue of $56.5bn.

In its cloud business, Microsoft said commercial revenue which includes cloud services sales, came in at $38.9bn compared to expectations of $38.1bn. The company's Intelligent Cloud segment, which includes its Azure business, brought in $24.1bn in the quarter, up 20% year over year.

Matt Britzman, senior equity analyst at Hargreaves Lansdown (HL.L), said: The downbeat stock reaction is likely due to guidance given on the call.

"Margins are expected to come under pressure next quarter as the ramp-up in AI spending hits the cost line, and with Azure growth expected at 31-32%, that would mark a slowdown quarter-on-quarter."

Meta Platforms (META)

Social media company Meta was also down in pre-market trading on Thursday, with shares trading more than 4% lower, following the release of its third-quarter results.

Meta posted earnings per share of $6.03 for the third quarter, which was ahead of expectations of $5.25, based on consensus estimates compiled by Bloomberg. This figure was also ahead of the $4.50 earnings per share Meta reported in Q3 last year.

Revenue came in at $40.5bn for the third quarter, beating forecasts of $40.2bn, as well as rising on last year's figure of $34.1bn.

However, Meta forecast revenue of between $45bn and $48bn for the fourth quarter, with analysts looking for $46.09bn. The company also said it expects capital expenses to grow significantly in 2025.

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Dan Coatsworth, investment analyst at AJ Bell (AJB.L), highlighted that while Meta's daily active user growth for its social media platforms and apps was up 5% to 3.29 billion individuals, this missed the 3.31 billion market forecast.

"It’s not simply enough for Meta to move ahead, it needs to stay in the fast lane at all times as far as the market is concerned. Investors typically care about the short term and they want more, more, more," he said.