This week in tech: Surges at Alphabet, Meta, Intel; Microsoft's growing AI spend

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Investing.com -- Here is your weekly Pro Recap on the biggest headlines out of tech this week: huge earnings beats at Alphabet, Meta, and Intel - and a spending warning from Microsoft.

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Alphabet beats on strong ad and cloud growth; appoints CFO as chief investment officer

Alphabet (NASDAQ:GOOGL) (NASDAQ:GOOG) shares were riding high after the search giant said Tuesday that it earned $1.44 per share on a top line of $74.6 billion in the second quarter, driven by advertising growth and robust performance in its cloud business.

Analysts polled by Investing.com had expected EPS of $1.34 on revenue of $72.82B.

Google Advertising climbed 3.2%, to $44.68B, with Google Search & other rising 4.8% to $40.69B; Google Cloud was up 28%, to $8.03B, ahead of analyst estimates of $7.87B.

The company also said CFO Ruth Porat will assume a newly created role of chief investment officer, starting in September, which will put her in charge of Alphabet’s "Other Bets" investments.

After the results, research firm Bernstein highlighted the Search beat and "solid progress" on the AI front, commenting: "A clean quarter. Balanced risk/reward from here for a company steadily improving top-line while all-in on an expensive AI endeavor."

Goldman Sachs hiked the price target by $12 to $152 per share on Buy-rated GOOGL stock, writing:

While some questions remain around AI’s impact on core products or cost structure, we continue to see Alphabet as a leader that is well positioned to capitalize on a consumer/enterprise computing shift across multiple platforms/products.

GOOGL shares closed the week up 9% to $132.58.



Microsoft tops estimates but warns of rising capex for AI investment

Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT) beat on earnings for the second quarter, but shares lost ground after the company warned that capex should rise over the next several quarters in a race to meet strong AI demand.

“For FY '24, the impact will be weighted toward H2. To support our Microsoft Cloud growth and demand for our AI platform, we will accelerate investment in our cloud infrastructure,” CFO Amy Hood said on the earnings call.

For Q2, Microsoft announced EPS of $2.69, better than the $2.55 consensus, on revenue of $56.2B vs. expectations of $55.44B.

“Organizations are asking not only how – but how fast – they can apply this next generation of AI to address the biggest opportunities and challenges they face – safely and responsibly,” said CEO Satya Nadella.