In Short:
– Microsoft faces its worst Wall Street quarter since 2008, with a 23% stock drop amid AI concerns.
– AI assistant Copilot struggles for traction, while rising oil prices could impact data centre costs.
Microsoft has reported its worst quarter on Wall Street since the 2008 financial crisis, primarily due to concerns surrounding its artificial intelligence initiatives.The stock fell 23% in the first quarter, a larger drop than any of its tech peers or the Nasdaq index, which declined 7% in the same period.
Microsoft struggles
Microsoft continues to lead in workplace productivity software and its Windows operating system but faces challenges in efficiently expanding AI capabilities and enhancing its cloud infrastructure.
Rising oil prices due to the war in Iran could increase costs for data centre operations.
Furthermore, Microsoft’s AI assistant, Copilot, has not gained significant user traction, as clients gravitate towards offerings from Google, OpenAI, and Anthropic.
Analyst Ben Reitzes from Melius Research described Microsoft’s position as precarious, highlighting that fixing Copilot requires use of valuable Azure capacity.
Software stocks are experiencing a broad downturn amid an “AI-inspired SaaSpocalypse,” affecting companies like Adobe, Atlassian, and ServiceNow, all of which are down more than 30% this year.
Jason Lemkin of SaaStr commented on this trend, suggesting that traditional SaaS is in decline and struggling compared to the S&P 500.
According to Capital IQ data, Microsoft’s stock multiple has not seen such lows since the introduction of ChatGPT by OpenAI.
Analyst Gil Luria from DA Davidson argues that the current sell-off is excessive and recommends buying shares, citing Microsoft’s revenue growth of nearly 17%.
He believes that Microsoft’s performance disparity and its valuation have reached historic highs, with predictions of earnings growth surpassing the broader market.
“Holding Microsoft Windows and Office remains crucial for enterprise customers,” he noted.
Despite efforts to increase profitability using the Microsoft 365 Copilot AI add-on, only a small 3% of Office commercial clients have adopted it as yet.