AWS, Google Cloud Platform, and Microsoft Azure saw a slowdown of their huge revenue growth rates in the second quarter, according to the companies’ quarterly earnings reports. Executives pointed to macroeconomic conditions and said they remained bullish on cloud services under any economic conditions.

Jessica Davis, Senior Editor

August 3, 2022

4 Min Read
Dollar sign and symbol of the cloud business in the network. 3d render illustration.
Volodymyr Semenchuk via Alamy Stock Photos

Cloud service revenues are still growing at a fast pace after many organizations accelerated their digital transformation plans due to the pandemic. However, that accelerated pace may be slowing a bit as CIOs look at inflation and recessionary indicators, at least if you judge by the quarterly earnings announced by three of the big cloud providers last week -- Amazon Web Services, Google Cloud Platform, and Microsoft Azure.

Keep in mind, these cloud providers are still growing at a fast pace, just not quite as fast as they had been. For instance, Amazon said that revenue from its cloud segment rose 33% in the second quarter over the previous quarter. But that rate of growth was slower than the 37% growth rate reported in the previous quarter.

AWS

On Amazon’s earnings call an analyst asked about a slowdown in cloud booking rates. Amazon’s CFO Brian Olsavsky acknowledged macroeconomic concerns but repeated the value proposition public cloud has over private data center spending.

“When you’re trying to launch a new product or service, you have to face building your own data center and getting capital for a data center and building it yourself or moving to the cloud and essentially buying incremental infrastructure capacity,” he said. “Then cloud computing really shows its value.”

Microsoft Azure

Meanwhile, Microsoft reported that its revenues from Azure and other cloud services grew by 40% for the most recent quarter over the previous quarter. That compared to a growth rate of 46% for the previous quarter.

Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella told analysts on his company’s earnings call that Azure’s performance was impacted by businesses trying to deal with the macroeconomic situation by trying to do more with less, and that Microsoft was trying to help them do that.

“For example, moving to the cloud is the best way to shape your spend with demand uncertainty, right, because in fact, if anything, one of the things we’re seeing is an increased shift towards the cloud, and then of course, optimizing your bill,” he said. “We are incenting even our own field to ensure that the bills for our customers come down. And that, in fact, even shows up in some of the volatility in our Azure numbers, because that’s one of the big benefits of the public cloud…Coming out of this macroeconomic crisis, the public cloud will be even a bigger winner because it does act as that deflationary force.”

GCP

Google Cloud Platform saw a 35% growth in revenue for its cloud unit over the previous quarter, but that growth rate was lower than the 44% growth rate enjoyed by the company in the first quarter. When asked by an analyst during its earnings call if Google Cloud Platform was seeing a slowdown and pullback by customers, Alphabet and Google CEO Sundar Pichai was optimistic, but tempered his comments with an acknowledgment of the macroeconomic factors.

“On cloud, we continue to see strong momentum, substantial market opportunity here, and it feels like early stages of this transformation,” he said. He added that he is always in conversations with customers of all sizes who are just beginning their cloud journey, indicating the big opportunities ahead. That said, some customers may be feeling other economic pressures.

“You do see a varying mix of some customers impacted in their ability to spend,” he said. “Some customers just taking longer times. And maybe in some cases thinking about the term for which they’re booking and so on. But I don’t necessarily view it as a longer-term trend as much as working through the macro uncertainty that everyone is dealing with.”

A June 2022 Gartner report ranked public cloud providers and said the market grew by 41.4% in 2021 to total $90.9 billion. In 2021 the top five IaaS providers accounted for over 80% of the market. Amazon continued to lead the worldwide IaaS market with 38.9% market share followed by Microsoft with 21.1% market share. Alibaba was third with 9.5% market share and Google was fourth with 7.1% market share. Huawei rounded out the top 5 with 4.6% market share.

What to Read Next:

Special Report: How Fragile is the Cloud, Really?

Lessons Learned from Recent Major Outages

Cyber Resiliency: How CIOs Can Prepare for a Cloud Outage

About the Author(s)

Jessica Davis

Senior Editor

Jessica Davis is a Senior Editor at InformationWeek. She covers enterprise IT leadership, careers, artificial intelligence, data and analytics, and enterprise software. She has spent a career covering the intersection of business and technology. Follow her on twitter: @jessicadavis.

Never Miss a Beat: Get a snapshot of the issues affecting the IT industry straight to your inbox.

You May Also Like


More Insights