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The slowdown has come for the cloud business

 1 year ago
source link: https://finance.yahoo.com/news/the-slowdown-has-come-for-the-cloud-business-193410736.html
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Daniel Howley
·Technology Editor
Thu, October 27, 2022, 4:34 AM·4 min read

This article was first featured in Yahoo Finance Tech, a weekly newsletter highlighting our original content on the industry. Get it sent directly to your inbox every Wednesday by 4 p.m. ET. Subscribe

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Even cloud giants like Microsoft can't avoid the economic slowdown

The economic slowdown has come for tech companies’ big cash cows: the cloud businesses that provide their clients with inexpensive computing power and applications.

On Tuesday, Microsoft (MSFT) reported that its all-important Azure cloud division will see slower growth than it expected this quarter. The same day, Google parent Alphabet (GOOG, GOOGL) reported that its Google Cloud Platform growth slowed from 44% in the third quarter 2021 to 37% in the third quarter.

Amazon (AMZN) is expected to report 33% growth in its AWS segment when it announces its earnings Oct. 27. That would mark a drop from the 39% growth it saw in the same quarter last year.

“We’re seeing some budgetary pressure on the enterprise side,” Piper Sandler equity research analyst Brent Bracelin told Yahoo Finance. “We certainly wouldn’t say enterprise software, cloud is immune from the macro and we’re starting to see cracks.”

Cloud growth had been meteoric through the pandemic. Its slowdown means companies across various sectors are cutting budgets and looking for ways to save amid near-record inflation, rising interest rates, and recession fears. Those cuts are hitting Big Tech where it hurts.

The cloud is facing a huge test

Cloud computing services generally help companies save money. Rather than having to purchase their own software or run their own servers, businesses of all sizes can turn to cloud providers to offer those services through the web.

Amazon, Google, and Microsoft’s cloud segments also offer what’s known as a consumption model of business, meaning their clients only pay when they use the cloud services. Think of it like renting a car when you need to travel somewhere versus owning a car. Instead of ponying up for monthly payments, insurance, and repairs, you just pay for the time you’re using the car.


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