AI Powers Microsoft's Q1 Growth, but Stock Falls on Guidance. Is It Now a No-Brainer Buy?

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Microsoft's (NASDAQ: MSFT) cloud computing platform Azure continued to be the growth driver for the stock when the software giant reported its fiscal Q1 earnings. However, the company's guidance for Azure, while strong, left investors wanting more.

The decline in its share price following the report's release on Wednesday leaves Microsoft stock up only around 10% on the year. Let's take a closer look at the company's results to see if this is a good opportunity to buy the dip.

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Azure revenue accelerates

Azure was once again Microsoft's growth engine, with year-over-year revenue growth of 33% (34% in constant currency), which was an acceleration from the 29% (30% in constant currency) growth it saw last quarter. The revenue growth was well above the 28% to 29% constant currency growth the company had previously forecast.

Microsoft credited the strong growth to Azure OpenAI usage, which has doubled in the last six months, as it helps customers build their own artificial intelligence (AI) agents and copilots. It also said that Azure AI is feeding into increased usage of its data and analytics services.

However, investors were disappointed that company management only forecasted Azure revenue to grow by 31% to 32% in constant currency in its fiscal Q2. This is despite the company saying growth would accelerate in the second half of its fiscal year as its prior capital expenditures (capex) create more capacity to meet the strong demand it is seeing.

Overall Intelligent Cloud revenue, where Azure resides, climbed 20% year over year to $24.1 billion.

Looking at Microsoft's other segments, Productivity and Business Processes, which is where Office and LinkedIn reside, saw revenue jump 12% year over year to $28.3 billion. Dynamics 365 and Office 365 Commercial led the way with revenue growth of 14% and 13%, respectively, while LinkedIn revenue grew 10% and Office 365 Consumer revenue rose 5%.

Microsoft said its Copilot 365 AI agents continue to see swift adoption, with more than 70% of the Fortune 500 using the tools. Meanwhile, it said the adoption of copilots for ERP and CRM systems has been helping power the results at Dynamics.

Revenue in its More Personal Computing segment, home to Windows and Xbox, jumped 17% year over year to $13.2 billion. Microsoft's recent acquisition of video game maker Activision helped power the results, while search and news advertising revenue was strong.