
Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT) delivered a quarterly revenue beat that felt like a miss to jittery investors, as the company’s massive bet on artificial intelligence faces a "show-me" moment on Wall Street.
The Redmond, Washington-based tech giant reported total revenue of $81.3 billion for the quarter ended Dec. 31, up 17% and ahead of the $80.27 billion consensus.
However, the stock plunged 7.2% in extended trading as the market focused on a cloud business that is growing rapidly, but perhaps not fast enough to justify a historic infrastructure bill.
Revenue at Azure, the company’s centerpiece cloud division, grew 39%—a hair above the 38.8% analysts expected.
While the growth is robust, it comes amid intensifying competition from Google’s Gemini 3 models and a high-profile "multicloud" shift by key partner OpenAI.
Since its October restructuring, OpenAI has signed a landmark $38 billion cloud deal with Amazon Web Services, signaling that Microsoft’s first-mover advantage in the generative AI race is entering a more contested phase.
The anxiety centers on the "AI payoff" timeline.
With capital expenditures currently on a $120 billion annual run-rate, investors are hypersensitive to any sign of decelerating returns.
Analysts also noted that Microsoft’s 27% stake in OpenAI is now a double-edged sword: while it secures the industry’s most advanced models, it also forces Microsoft to book its share of OpenAI’s significant operational losses.
For the upcoming quarter, the company is facing a high bar to prove that its "AI factories" can maintain margins as depreciation costs begin to ramp up.