Microsoft’s lacklustre quarterly outlook points to more gloom ahead for the tech sector, analysts said, after the tech bellwether warned its customers were cautious about spending in a turbulent economy.
Microsoft, the second most valuable US company, sounded a cautious note in its quarterly earnings report as a steep fall in client spending has sparked a series of high-profile layoffs in the tech industry.
The warning sent Microsoft’s shares down over 3%, while those of peers Amazon.com, Apple, Alphabet and Meta Platforms fell as much as 4%, weighing on the Nasdaq Composite.
Shares of other cloud companies including Salesforce, IBM and Oracle all declined.
Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella and other Microsoft executives used the words “caution” and “cautious” at least six times on the one hour call on Tuesday.
“Microsoft is the biggest bellwether for enterprise and cloud spending in the world. Nadella’s comments about slowdown in the cloud is not surprising… It confirms a darker macro is in the horizon,” said Dan Ives, analyst at Wedbush.
“This is going to be a trend we see across the tech space, with management teams being conservative given the uncertain environment,” Ives added.
Nadella, however, said Microsoft would focus on AI technology, calling it the next major wave of computing. The tech giant has made multibillion dollar investments in OpenAI, deepening ties with the startup behind the chatbot sensation ChatGPT and building on a bet it made on AI four years ago.
‘Warning sign’
Analysts said the sharp slowdown in Microsoft’s revenue growth was a “warning sign” for the tech sector, with more weakness at its PC division than the cloud business.
“What we learnt is that no one is immune to [the] macro… What is telling is the quarter was largely fine, but we started to see softness in December and the outlook for this quarter was worse than expected,” said Rishi Jaluria, analyst at RBC.
Microsoft forecast third quarter revenue in its Intelligent Cloud business a tad below analysts’ estimates, with a growth rate of as much as 19%. It did, however, report better-than-expected second quarter revenue for that segment, which initially pushed shares higher on Tuesday evening.
Read: Cloud business saves Microsoft from PC slump
Companies from Amazon to Facebook parent Meta Platforms are already preparing for tougher months ahead by slashing tens of thousands of jobs to keep their cash reserves high.
Read: Microsoft makes $10-billion bet on AI as it lays off thousands
Analysts expect the cash to be used for other investments, which could include fresh buybacks, mergers and acquisitions or new technology such as artificial intelligence. — Nivedita Balu and Tiyashi Datta, (c) 2023 Reuters