Articles Tagged: cloud computing

3 articles found

AMD After Q3: Can EPYC Server Wins and AI‑Accelerator Momentum Turn Last Week’s Results into Durable Growth?

Advanced Micro Devices posted a robust fiscal third quarter and an above-consensus fourth-quarter revenue outlook, underscoring a strengthening multi-engine story across EPYC server CPUs and Instinct AI accelerators. The print adds hard numbers to a narrative investors have followed for months: steady CPU share gains in cloud and enterprise, paired with an expanding accelerator pipeline that now includes export-licensed MI308 shipments to China and headline-grabbing deployments with OpenAI and Oracle. Yet durable growth isn’t guaranteed. The data center build-out is real—and massive—but timing remains lumpy across the AI server stack, and the competitive bar set by Nvidia is extraordinarily high. This analysis unpacks what AMD just delivered, how EPYC and Instinct could compound from here, what the ecosystem is signaling about timing, and the risks and checkpoints that will determine whether last week’s momentum translates into multi-year, margin-accretive growth.

AMDEPYCInstinct+17 more

AI Boom or Bubble? Finance’s 2025 Playbook for Trillion‑Dollar Bets

Artificial intelligence has turned capital markets and corporate budgets into a single, self‑reinforcing flywheel. Equity investors have bid up the most AI‑exposed franchises to record valuations, while those same companies are deploying unprecedented sums into data centers, chips, and power. Nvidia’s sprint to a $5 trillion market capitalization crystallized the trade. Meanwhile, Microsoft, Alphabet and Meta are lifting multi‑year capex plans by tens of billions. The financial question for 2025 is brutally simple: Will real, monetizable demand arrive quickly enough to validate this capex—and who’s left holding the bag if it doesn’t? This playbook walks through the anatomy of the AI cycle from a markets and balance‑sheet perspective: the temperature check on valuations and momentum; the scale and composition of the capex arms race; the funding stack and where systemic risk could emerge; the state of enterprise adoption and ROI; bubble diagnostics and plausible scenarios; and, finally, portfolio positioning and risk management for investors navigating trillion‑dollar bets.

AIdata centershyperscalers+15 more

Microsoft After Earnings: Is Copilot Finally Paying Off? Azure AI Revenue, Office Monetization and the Cloud‑Margin Tradeoff

Microsoft opened its fiscal year with a clean beat on revenue and earnings, powered by 40% year-over-year growth at Azure and accelerating demand for AI services. Yet shares slipped in extended trading as management guided to a faster capital expenditure ramp to keep pace with capacity‑constrained AI infrastructure. The market’s verdict underscores a central question for the stock: Is Copilot’s monetization—and Azure’s AI wave—translating into durable, high‑return growth strong enough to offset near‑term margin pressure? The early evidence is compelling. Microsoft’s fiscal Q1 revenue rose to about $77.7 billion, with Intelligent Cloud up 28% and Azure outpacing peers. Meanwhile, Microsoft 365 revenue per user improved, helped by Copilot and E5 mix, and the Copilot family surpassed 150 million monthly active users. Commercial bookings more than doubled, and the company’s backlog swelled to $392 billion with roughly a two‑year weighted duration. But meeting demand requires scale—and capital. Capex jumped to $34.9 billion in Q1, about half of which went to short‑lived GPUs and CPUs, and the company now expects the FY2026 capex growth rate to exceed FY2025.

MicrosoftMSFTAzure+15 more