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Microsoft reported a robust fiscal third quarter on April 29, with revenue of $82.9 billion, driven by Microsoft Cloud revenue of $54.5 billion and Azure growth of about 40% year‑on‑year.
The company said its AI business has surpassed a $37 billion annual run rate and Microsoft 365 Copilot paid seats exceed 20 million.
Microsoft posted quarterly capital expenditures of $31.9 billion (up 49% year‑on‑year) and guided to roughly $40 billion of capex in the fiscal fourth quarter, while unveiling an unprecedented $190 billion of planned capital spending for calendar 2026.
Management flagged ongoing capacity constraints, cited higher component costs as part of the spending, and said it has broadened AI partnerships — adding Anthropic and revising terms with OpenAI that remove exclusive resale rights.
The results beat EPS estimates and mostly matched revenue expectations; shares fell more than 2% in after‑hours trading before settling.
Microsoft also signalled organisational changes and cost measures including employee buyout offers as it scales AI infrastructure and products.
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Key takeaways: Microsoft’s surge in capex is largely tied to costly, quickly ageing GPUs and datacenter buildout, which can compress margins and free cash flow; and the immediate after‑hours price drop looks driven more by thin liquidity and algorithmic hedging than by a definitive long‑term earnings reversal.







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