
Microsoft's revenue surged nearly 20% last quarter, but Azure cloud growth was not impressive enough, and AI spending exceeded expectations significantly, dropping 5% in after-hours trading | Earnings Report Insights

In the third quarter, Microsoft's revenue increased by 18% year-on-year, matching the highest growth rate in a year and a half achieved in the second quarter, while EPS growth slowed to 13%, still exceeding analyst expectations; revenue from Azure and other cloud services grew by 39%, matching the highest growth rate in two and a half years set in the second quarter, but still below some buyers' optimistic expectations; capital expenditures in the third quarter reached a new high, up 60% from the previous record and over 74% year-on-year; the investment in OpenAI impacted the net profit by nearly $3.1 billion in the third quarter. The CFO stated that Azure demand far exceeds available capacity, and Microsoft has not been able to keep up with demand
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