Microsoft faces doubts over AI spending
After months of promoting AI-driven growth, Microsoft now faces increasing investor scepticism. With slowing Azure expansion and questions over AI profitability, the tech giant’s latest earnings report will be closely watched.

Microsoft’s ambitious push into artificial intelligence is facing growing investor doubts as the company prepares to release its latest earnings report. Despite heavy investment in OpenAI and plans to spend $80 billion on AI infrastructure this fiscal year, its Azure cloud business has shown slowing growth for two consecutive quarters. Analysts now question whether AI-driven demand will be enough to reignite momentum.
The tech giant’s stock has underperformed many of its peers, with further pressure mounting after Chinese startup DeepSeek introduced a cost-effective AI model, sparking concerns about US dominance in the sector. Meanwhile, Microsoft’s AI-powered Copilot assistant has struggled to gain widespread traction beyond pilot programmes, forcing the company to adjust pricing strategies in an attempt to drive adoption.
While Microsoft still handles most of OpenAI’s cloud traffic, competition in AI infrastructure is intensifying. With investor sentiment turning cautious, the upcoming earnings report will be a key test of whether AI investments can translate into sustainable revenue growth.