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[Insights] Big Four CSPs Continue to Shine in Q1 2024 Financial Reports, AI Returns Garnering Attention


2024-05-06 Emerging Technologies editor

Four major cloud service providers (CSPs) including Google, Microsoft, Amazon, and Meta, sequentially released their first-quarter financial performance for the year 2024 (January 2024 to March 2024) at the end of April.

Each company has achieved double-digit growth of the revenue, with increased capital expenditures continuing to emphasize AI as their main development focus. The market’s current focus remains on whether AI investment projects can successfully translate into revenue from the previous quarter to date.

TrendForce’s Insights:

1. Strong Financial Performance of Top Four CSPs Driven by AI and Cloud Businesses

Alphabet, the parent company of Google, reported stellar financial results for the first quarter of 2024. Bolstered by growth in search engine, YouTube, and cloud services, revenue surpassed USD 80 billion, marking a 57% increase in profit. The company also announced its first-ever dividend payout, further boosting its stock price as all metrics exceeded market expectations, pushing its market capitalization past USD 2 trillion for the first time.For Google, the current development strategy revolves around its in-house LLM Gemini layout, aimed at strengthening its cloud services, search interaction interfaces, and dedicated hardware development.

Microsoft’s financial performance is equally impressive. This quarter, its revenue reached USD 61.9 billion, marking a year-on-year increase of 17%. Among its business segments, the Intelligent Cloud sector saw the highest growth, with a 21% increase in revenue, totaling $26.7 billion. Notably, the Azure division experienced a remarkable 31% growth, with Microsoft attributing 7% of this growth to AI demand.

In other words, the impact of AI on its performance is even more pronounced than in the previous quarter, prompting Microsoft to focus its future strategies more on the anticipated benefits from Copilot, both in software and hardware.

This quarter, Amazon achieved a remarkable revenue milestone, surpassing USD 140 billion, representing a year-on-year increase of 17%, surpassing market expectations. Furthermore, its profit reached USD 10.4 billion, far exceeding the USD 3.2 billion profit recorded in the same period in 2023.

The double-digit growth in advertising business and AWS (Amazon Web Services) drove this performance, with the latter being particularly highlighted for its AI-related opportunities. AWS achieved a record-high operating profit margin of 37.6% this quarter, with annual revenue expected to exceed $100 billion, and short-term plans to invest USD 150 billion in expanding data centers.

On the other hand, Meta reported revenue of USD 36.46 billion this quarter, marking a significant year-on-year growth of 27%, the largest growth rate since 2021. Profit also doubled compared to the same period in 2023, reaching USD 12.37 billion.

Meta’s current strategy focuses on allocating resources to areas such as smart glasses and mixed reality (MR) in the short and medium term. The company continues to leverage AI to enhance the user value of the virtual world.

2. Increased Capital Expenditure to Develop AI is a Common Consensus, Yet Profitability Remains Under Market Scrutiny

Observing the financial reports of major cloud players, the increase in capital expenditure to solidify their commitment to AI development can be seen as a continuation of last quarter’s focus.

In the first quarter of 2024, Microsoft’s capital expenditure surged by nearly 80% compared to the same period in 2023, reaching USD 14 billion. Google expects its quarterly expenditure to remain above USD 12 billion. Similarly, Meta has raised its capital expenditure guidance for 2024 to the range of USD 35 to USD 40 billion.

Amazon, considering its USD 14 billion expenditure in the first quarter as the minimum for the year, anticipates a significant increase in capital expenditure over the next year, exceeding the USD 48.4 billion spent in 2023. However, how these increased investments in AI will translate into profitability remains a subject of market scrutiny.

While the major cloud players remain steadfast in their focus on AI, market expectations may have shifted. For instance, despite impressive financial reports last quarter, both Google and Microsoft saw declines in their stock prices, unlike the significant increases seen this time. This could partly be interpreted as an expectation of short- to medium-term AI investment returns from products and services like Gemini and Copilot.

In contrast, Meta, whose financial performance is similarly impressive to other cloud giants, experienced a post-earnings stock drop of over 15%. This may be attributed partly to its conservative financial outlook and partly to the less-than-ideal investment returns from its focused areas of virtual wearable devices and AI value-added services.

Due to Meta’s relatively limited user base compared to the other three CSPs in terms of commercial end-user applications, its AI development efforts, such as the practical Llama 3 and the value-added Meta AI virtual assistant for its products, have not yielded significant benefits. While Llama 3 is free and open-source, and Meta AI has limited shipment, they evidently do not justify the development costs.

Therefore, Meta still needs to expand its ecosystem to facilitate the promotion of its AI services, aiming to create a business model that can translate technology into tangible revenue streams.

For example, Meta recently opened up the operating system Horizon OS of its VR device Quest to brands like Lenovo and Asus, allowing them to produce their own branded VR/MR devices. The primary goal is to attract developers to enrich the content database and thereby promote industry development.

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