Business
Microsoft Reports Strong Earnings but Heavy AI Spending and Azure Outage Rattle Investors
Microsoft posted stronger-than-expected quarterly earnings on Wednesday, driven by continued growth in cloud computing and artificial intelligence (AI) services. However, a surge in infrastructure spending and an Azure cloud outage tempered investor enthusiasm, sending the company’s shares down more than 3% in after-hours trading.
For the July–September 2025 quarter, Microsoft reported revenue of $77.7 billion (€66.2 billion) and profit of $30.8 billion (€26.5 billion), or $4.13 per share — well above analyst expectations of $3.67 per share on $75.38 billion (€64.9 billion) in revenue, according to FactSet. Quarterly profit rose 22% compared with the same period last year.
The results came amid mounting investor focus on Microsoft’s massive capital investments to expand its AI and cloud capabilities. The company spent nearly $35 billion (€30.1 billion) in capital expenditures during the quarter — one of its largest spending sprees to date. About half of that total went toward acquiring high-end computer chips, with much of the remainder directed toward expanding data centre infrastructure to meet surging AI demand.
Microsoft said it excluded financial impacts related to its investments in OpenAI from the reported results “to help clarify” the performance of its core operations. The company has already invested $11.6 billion (€9.99 billion) of its planned $13 billion (€11.19 billion) commitment to the ChatGPT maker.
This week also saw Microsoft renew its partnership with OpenAI, securing a 27% stake in the start-up’s new for-profit arm and extending its commercial rights to OpenAI’s products through 2032. While Microsoft is no longer OpenAI’s exclusive cloud provider, the agreement reinforces its strategic position in the rapidly evolving AI ecosystem.
The company’s valuation briefly crossed the $4 trillion (€3.44 trillion) mark for the second time this year following the OpenAI deal — a milestone shared only by Apple and Nvidia, the latter recently becoming the world’s first $5 trillion (€4.31 trillion) company.
Microsoft’s cloud-focused division, which includes Azure, reported revenue of $30.9 billion (€26.6 billion), up 28% year-on-year and slightly ahead of analyst forecasts. Its productivity and business software segment, home to Microsoft 365 and related services, rose 17% to $33 billion (€28.4 billion).
Despite these strong figures, Wednesday’s Azure outage and the scale of Microsoft’s AI-related investments prompted caution among investors. Analysts noted that while the company’s financials remain solid, the rapid pace of AI spending could pressure margins in the short term.
“Microsoft is clearly doubling down on AI, but the sheer cost of building this next-generation infrastructure is staggering,” one market analyst said. “The challenge will be converting that investment into sustained revenue growth.”
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