Shares in Microsoft jumped by almost 10% in pre-market trading after the company announced a surge in quarterly profits thanks to record revenues from its cloud computing division.
Net income increased 24% year on year to $27.2bn (£20.51bn), surpassing analysts' expectations for $25.3bn in the fourth quarter of Microsoft’s fiscal year, ending June 30. Revenue increased 18% to $76.4bn in the fiscal fourth quarter ending June 30, up from $64.7bn a year earlier. That’s the fastest growth in more than three years.
The company’s Intelligent Cloud unit, which includes the Azure cloud, produced $29.88bn in revenue in the final quarter. For the entire fiscal year, this AI division saw revenue surge 34% to a record $75bn.
The company predicted its capital expenditure for the next fiscal year would top $100bn, a 14% increase from the year prior.
It’s the fifth quarter in a row that Microsoft has beaten Wall Street’s expectations.
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“Cloud and AI is the driving force of business transformation across every industry and sector,” said Satya Nadella, chairman and chief executive officer of Microsoft. “We’re innovating across the tech stack to help customers adapt and grow in this new era, and this year, Azure surpassed $75bn in revenue, up 34%, driven by growth across all workloads,” Nadella said in a statement.
Shares in the company are trading a near record of $513, up 22% since the start of the year.
Meta shares were up by 12% ahead of the US opening bell after posting a bumper set of financial results that eased concerns it was lagging rivals in the AI race.
The firm, which owns Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp, said revenue for the three months to the end of June rose 22% from the same period last year to $47.5bn. Meanwhile, profits jumped by 36% to $18.3bn. Profit per share came in at $7.14, above analysts' estimates.
Meta said it expected its total expenses for 2025 to come in the range of $114bn and $118bn. The company added its AI initiatives will “result in a 2026 year-over-year expense growth rate that is above the 2025 expense growth.”
“I think there are all these questions that people have about what are going to be the timelines to get to really strong AI or superintelligence … we've observed the more aggressive assumptions, or the fastest assumptions, have been the ones that have most accurately predicted what would happen. I think that that just continued to happen over the course of this year too,” CEO Mark Zuckerberg said on a conference call with analysts.