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Microsoft beats Q2 earnings as Azure jumps 39% and cloud revenue tops $50B


by Devesh Kumar
for Invezz
Microsoft beats Q2 earnings as Azure jumps 39% and cloud revenue tops $50B

Share:

Microsoft Q2 earnings show Azure up 39%, cloud tops $50B, AI drives growth as OpenAI gains inflate headline profits.

Microsoft (NASDAQ: MSFT) reported second-quarter revenue of $81.3 billion, surpassing Wall Street expectations, with Azure cloud services jumping 39% and Microsoft Cloud crossing the $50 billion quarterly revenue milestone for the first time.

Operating income hit $38.3 billion, up 21% year-over-year, while non-GAAP earnings per share reached $4.14, growing 24% and reflecting solid underlying business momentum beneath headline numbers inflated by investment gains.

CEO Satya Nadella captured the strategic significance:

We are only at the beginning phases of AI diffusion and already Microsoft has built an AI business that is larger than some of our biggest franchises.

The earnings beat masked an important distinction.

Reported net income of $38.5 billion and earnings per share of $5.16 jumped 60% year-over-year, an eye-catching number that obscured a $7.6 billion accounting gain from Microsoft’s investment in OpenAI.

The non-GAAP earnings per share of $4.14 rose 24%, indicating solid mid-twenties operational growth.​

Azure and cloud: Where AI monetization is happening

The real story lives in Azure. The cloud-computing unit grew 39%, beating the 36 to 38% consensus forecast and extending Microsoft’s three-quarter streak of acceleration.

This marks the highest Azure growth rate since the company went aggressive on AI infrastructure, and it reflects demand from enterprises racing to deploy machine-learning models and AI workloads at scale.​

Microsoft’s broader cloud business, which bundles Azure, Microsoft 365 subscriptions, LinkedIn, and Dynamics software, crossed $51.5 billion in quarterly revenue, up 26% year-over-year.

More tellingly, the company’s backlog of contracts not yet recognized as revenue exploded to $625 billion, up 110% from a year earlier.

That figure includes a $250 billion commitment from OpenAI to purchase Azure computing services and a separate $30 billion deal with Anthropic.

These multi-year commitments provide Microsoft with revenue visibility stretching years into the future, reducing forecast risk.​

CFO Amy Hood emphasized the point:

Microsoft Cloud revenue crossed $50 billion this quarter, reflecting the strong demand for our portfolio of services.

But beneath the headline was an admission: capacity constraints continue to limit growth.

Azure remains supply-constrained, meaning demand for cloud computing outpaces Microsoft’s ability to deliver, a rare and valuable market position.​

Microsoft Q2 earnings: Investing for growth

Microsoft’s second-quarter capital expenditures hit $29.9 billion, roughly double the prior-year quarter.

The company is on pace to exceed $100 billion in annual capex, a staggering investment justified by the undersupply of AI-capable infrastructure.

Operating margin still expanded to 47%, showing that revenue growth is outpacing spending growth.

The leverage dynamic works both ways. Heavy spending today limits near-term earnings growth.

But once data center capacity comes online and utilization normalizes, the combination of high cloud margins (Azure operates at roughly 42% operating margin) and high volumes could expand profitability significantly.

With a commercial backlog of $625 billion and Azure still constrained, Microsoft has rare visibility into future growth.



The post Microsoft beats Q2 earnings as Azure jumps 39% and cloud revenue tops $50B appeared first on Invezz

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Microsoft beats Q2 earnings as Azure jumps 39% and cloud revenue tops $50B


by Devesh Kumar
for Invezz
Microsoft beats Q2 earnings as Azure jumps 39% and cloud revenue tops $50B

Share:

Microsoft Q2 earnings show Azure up 39%, cloud tops $50B, AI drives growth as OpenAI gains inflate headline profits.

Microsoft (NASDAQ: MSFT) reported second-quarter revenue of $81.3 billion, surpassing Wall Street expectations, with Azure cloud services jumping 39% and Microsoft Cloud crossing the $50 billion quarterly revenue milestone for the first time.

Operating income hit $38.3 billion, up 21% year-over-year, while non-GAAP earnings per share reached $4.14, growing 24% and reflecting solid underlying business momentum beneath headline numbers inflated by investment gains.

CEO Satya Nadella captured the strategic significance:

We are only at the beginning phases of AI diffusion and already Microsoft has built an AI business that is larger than some of our biggest franchises.

The earnings beat masked an important distinction.

Reported net income of $38.5 billion and earnings per share of $5.16 jumped 60% year-over-year, an eye-catching number that obscured a $7.6 billion accounting gain from Microsoft’s investment in OpenAI.

The non-GAAP earnings per share of $4.14 rose 24%, indicating solid mid-twenties operational growth.​

Azure and cloud: Where AI monetization is happening

The real story lives in Azure. The cloud-computing unit grew 39%, beating the 36 to 38% consensus forecast and extending Microsoft’s three-quarter streak of acceleration.

This marks the highest Azure growth rate since the company went aggressive on AI infrastructure, and it reflects demand from enterprises racing to deploy machine-learning models and AI workloads at scale.​

Microsoft’s broader cloud business, which bundles Azure, Microsoft 365 subscriptions, LinkedIn, and Dynamics software, crossed $51.5 billion in quarterly revenue, up 26% year-over-year.

More tellingly, the company’s backlog of contracts not yet recognized as revenue exploded to $625 billion, up 110% from a year earlier.

That figure includes a $250 billion commitment from OpenAI to purchase Azure computing services and a separate $30 billion deal with Anthropic.

These multi-year commitments provide Microsoft with revenue visibility stretching years into the future, reducing forecast risk.​

CFO Amy Hood emphasized the point:

Microsoft Cloud revenue crossed $50 billion this quarter, reflecting the strong demand for our portfolio of services.

But beneath the headline was an admission: capacity constraints continue to limit growth.

Azure remains supply-constrained, meaning demand for cloud computing outpaces Microsoft’s ability to deliver, a rare and valuable market position.​

Microsoft Q2 earnings: Investing for growth

Microsoft’s second-quarter capital expenditures hit $29.9 billion, roughly double the prior-year quarter.

The company is on pace to exceed $100 billion in annual capex, a staggering investment justified by the undersupply of AI-capable infrastructure.

Operating margin still expanded to 47%, showing that revenue growth is outpacing spending growth.

The leverage dynamic works both ways. Heavy spending today limits near-term earnings growth.

But once data center capacity comes online and utilization normalizes, the combination of high cloud margins (Azure operates at roughly 42% operating margin) and high volumes could expand profitability significantly.

With a commercial backlog of $625 billion and Azure still constrained, Microsoft has rare visibility into future growth.



The post Microsoft beats Q2 earnings as Azure jumps 39% and cloud revenue tops $50B appeared first on Invezz

Read the article at Invezz

In This News

Share:

In This News

Share:

Read More

Meta stock dubbed cheap by ‘historic norms’ as Q4 earnings beat estimates

Meta stock dubbed cheap by ‘historic norms’ as Q4 earnings beat estimates

Meta Platforms (NASDAQ: META) is inching higher in extended hours after the tech tita...
Evening digest: Bitcoin reclaims $90K, chip stocks surge, Amazon layoffs

Evening digest: Bitcoin reclaims $90K, chip stocks surge, Amazon layoffs

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