Alphabet and Microsoft ignited a rally in technology stocks on Friday with earnings that showed big AI investments were driving growth, allaying doubts that their costly bets would take time to pay off after a soft forecast from Meta Platforms.
Alphabet rose 10%, crossing $2 trillion in market value with a gain of about $180 billion as it sweetened the pot for investors with its maiden dividend and a $70 billion stock buyback.
The world's fourth most valuable firm flirted with the milestone on an intraday basis over three years ago although it never closed above that level, according to LSEG Datastream.
Microsoft gained nearly 3% and was set to add more than $80 billion to its market value.
After pouring billions of dollars into the infrastructure needed to support AI applications, both Alphabet and Microsoft reported that their quarterly revenue growth was outpacing expectations as more users turn to services including the Copilot AI assistant and the Gemini chatbot.
AI services accounted for 7 percentage points of the 31% jump in revenue at Microsoft's Azure cloud-computing platform between January and March, finance chief Amy Hood said.
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She added near-term AI demand was a bit higher than the company's capacity, which held back growth in the quarter and highlighted the need for spending to expand its infrastructure.
At Google, cloud revenue jumped about 28% with strong growth in Google Workspace, where the Alphabet unit offers a slew of AI features powered by its large language model Gemini.
The results contrasted with a warning of higher spending and softer-than-expected growth from social media giant Meta , whose stock tumbled 10% on Thursday.
"This quarter illustrated how demand remains high for generative AI from Microsoft customers, and we continue to believe that Microsoft sits as a leader in this GenAI environment," D.A. Davidson analyst Gil Luria said.
"Meta is indicating the results of further increased investment may be years away while Microsoft and Google are showing them right now."
The results sparked a rise of 2% in Amazon.com, which will report earnings on Tuesday. AI chip stocks Nvidia , Broadcom and Marvell Technology also rose between 1% and 2%, riding on optimism that an ongoing boom in spending by tech giants would power demand for their semiconductors.
"The three hyperscalers (major cloud companies) we've heard from thus far all highlighted a similar message on AI capital expenditure - this is an arms race, the AI opportunity is enormous, and spending will continue to be aggressive/ahead of market expectations," Bernstein analyst Michael Chiang said.
Microsoft's capital expenditures grew by $300 million from the previous quarter to $11.5 billion, while Alphabet's capital expenditures were $12 billion, a 91% jump from a year prior.
At least 19 analysts raised their price target on Alphabet, pushing the median view to $176.65, compared with its last close of $156. Microsoft saw 17 price-target increases from analysts, with the median view on the stock now at $475.
Microsoft has a 12-month forward price-to-earnings ratio of 30.40, compared with Alphabet's 21.63.
Some analysts believe the more premium valuation was justified.
"Google Cloud showed improvement but less than the growth of Azure. Azure's enterprise focus and their differentiated capabilities played a part and we (and the market) await Amazon Web Services results," Bernstein analysts said.
NatWest net down 27% as interest rate benefits fade
NatWest’s first-quarter profit fell by a less than expected 27 per cent, having weathered a sector-wide squeeze on income from increased competition for savings, lending and mortgage products over the past year. Rising central bank interest rates and media attention on the rates banks pay to savers have resulted in customers shopping around for better products, hitting retail banks across their core business lines.
Nomura net jumps 8-fold as retail income surges
Nomura Holdings reported on Friday a 670 per cent jump in quarterly net profit compared to a year earlier as its retail and investment banking income rose to their highest levels in eight years. January-March net profit was 56.8 billion yen compared to 7.3 billion yen a year earlier when worries about a global banking crisis engulfed global markets and hit Nomura's investment banking business.