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Category: Software

Slowdown In Cloud Stocks On Thin Ice Following Q1 Guides

Posted on March 29, 2023June 30, 2026 by io-fund
Slowdown In Cloud Stocks On Thin Ice Following Q1 Guides

This article was originally published on Forbes on Mar 23, 2023,09:56pm EDTForbes Forbes on Mar 23, 2023,09:56pm EDT

Following last quarter’s earnings, we published an analysis on cloud that showed hyperscalers were slowing (5%) sequentially and best-of-breed was slowing (12%) sequentially, based on Q4 guides.

What was most important for tech investors to realize, is that this is out of character for cloud, as Q4 is typically the strongest quarter. We concluded that this foreshadows a weaker-than-expected Q1 and also a weaker FY2023 than was currently baked into estimates.

Following the most recent earnings reports, our prediction is playing out that the slowdown we had predicted would worsen after the current quarter results.

This is important because the cloud category has treated investors quite well with recurring revenue, resiliency during Covid, and some of the strongest examples of product-market fit available on the public markets. However, not even this can overcome the effects of lower budgets and cloud spend, which is the top driver in terms of year-over-year comparisons.

Below, we discuss the fundamental weakness apparent in the most recent earnings reports. For our Premium Research Members, we are extending the analysis next week to include a few outliers that seem more resilient than others in the category, and those that are definitively the weakest.

Often times, identifying one or two strong companies in a category and patiently waiting can pay off, as the cloud category will put downward pressure on the stock price, including the outliers. Our goal is to buy the outlier(s) after they’ve been unduly penalized.

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Big Tech: Bellwethers for Cloud Spend

Big Tech competes with best-of-breed cloud companies in nearly every capacity. For example, although most think of Azure when looking at Microsoft’s earnings reports, the company has a formidable presence in cybersecurity worth over $20 billion in revenue. Google’s BigQuery is one of Snowflake’s largest competitors, as is Amazon’s RedShift. I covered the differences between the three for Forbes here.

We also made the following point about why the Big 3 is an important proxy in our analysis: “Slowing Growth in Cloud Stocks: When Will We Hit a Bottom”

“The Big 3 are the best proxy because their reports represent the layer in the tech stack that tends to be the most resilient in terms of churn. The switching costs are quite high for cloud IaaS services. The Big 3 also afford a more concentrated view by owning 66% of market share across three companies whereas SaaS is spread across thousands of companies.”

The slowdown over the past four quarters is quite visible:

Cloud Slowdown over past four quarters

The Cloud slowdown over the past four quarters is quite visible – I/O FUND

Cloud Slowdown in Four Quarters

The Cloud slowdown over the past four quarters – COMPANY RESULTS

Key Highlights from the Cloud Hyperscalers:

AWS:

  • AWS sales grew by 20% YoY to $21.4 billion in Q4, down from 27% YoY growth reported in Q3 and down from 33% YoY reported in Q2
  • Q4 2022 growth rate of 20% was halved as AWS sales grew by 40% YoY in Q4 2021
  • AWS revenue also missed the management guidance of 25% growth
  • Guidance for Q1 was not provided, however, it was stated the YoY growth rates in January were “in the mid-teens”

Azure:

  • Microsoft Azure revenue grew by 31% YoY and was down from 35% in Q3. In constant currency, it grew 38% and beat the management guidance by 1%.
  • Microsoft Azure revenue grew by 46% YoY and also in CC basis in Q4 2021.
  • The management provided guidance of 30% to 31% growth rate for the March quarter, down from 38% this quarter and down from 49% on a CC basis in the year ago March quarter.
  • You may recall the 5-point deceleration announced in the October report caused concern in the market. This is technically a steeper deceleration.

GCP:

  • Google Cloud revenue grew by 32% YoY to $7.3 billion and was down from 38% growth in Q3. Revenue missed the analyst consensus estimates by 1.5%.
  • The growth rate was also significantly lower than last year’s growth (down about 1/3rd) when Google Cloud revenue grew by 45% YoY in Q4 2021.

What Big 3 Management Teams are Saying

When there’s evidence of a deceleration, analysts will typically ask the management teams to elaborate on the call with the idea of identifying how much more deceleration may be reported in the future and for how long.

Here’s a question regarding AWS’s slowdown:

Mark Mahaney

[…] Brian, just any color on why mid-teens is kind of a holdable growth rate for AWS over the next couple of quarters, given what looks like pretty clearly, continuing deterioration in enterprise demand?

Brian Olsavsky (CFO)

So on the AWS growth rate, I'm not sure I can forecast for you with any level of certainty what is going to happen beyond this quarter. You kind of — this is a bit uncharted territories economically. And as we mentioned, there's some unique things going on with the customer base that I think many in this industry are all seeing the same thing.

[..] And whether there's short term, perhaps short-term belt tightening in the infrastructure expense by a lot of companies, I think the long-term trends are still there. And I think the quickest way to save money is to get to the cloud, quite frankly.”

Amazon’s management also volunteered the following in their opening remarks:

“Starting back in the middle of the third quarter of 2022, we saw our year-over-year growth rates slow as enterprises of all sizes evaluated ways to optimize their cloud spending in response to the tough macroeconomic conditions. As expected, these optimization efforts continued into the fourth quarter.”

They expect the optimization efforts to continue at least for the next couple of quarters and, in the absence of proper guidance for Q1, said that the YoY growth rates in January were in the mid-teens.”

Per management: “As we look ahead, we expect these optimization efforts will continue to be a headwind to AWS growth in at least the next couple of quarters. So far in the first month of the year, AWS year-over-year revenue growth is in the mid-teens.”

Here’s what Microsoft’s CEO, Satya Nadella, said in the first part of his opening comments:

“As I meet with customers and partners, a few things are increasingly clear. Just as we saw customers accelerate their digital spend during the pandemic, we are now seeing them optimize that spend. Also, organizations are exercising caution given the macroeconomic uncertainty.”

Later in the call the CFO mentions, “As noted earlier, growth continued to moderate, particularly in December, and we exited the quarter with Azure constant currency growth in the mid-30s.”

The I/O Fund has launched a new $99/year Premium Newsletter called "Essentials" — this newsletter delivers premium samples for our readers who want more actionable analysis for their tech portfolios. This month, we released a stock pick that we believe will be a leader in 2023 plus a video with the buy plan.$99/year Premium Newsletter$99/year Premium Newsletter called "Essentials" — this newsletter delivers premium samples for our readers who want more actionable analysis for their tech portfolios. This month, we released a stock pick that we believe will be a leader in 2023 plus a video with the buy planbuy plan.

My Translation:

Cloud will see belt tightening in 2023 and investors will have to gamble on the timing for when this turns around. It could be in the next few quarters or it could take years. Most of this will depend on the economy, as the common denominator for cloud stocks is budgets.

To be clear, the category has the potential to be quite resilient, which we covered in 2019 when we said, “My prediction is this may be one of the last cycles when tech is considered less safe than value stocks. As the market will find out (the hard way), cloud software is actually very safe. It is insulated from trade wars and overseas manufacturing issues. It reduces costs for enterprises, which is ideal for a recession. Lastly, cloud software is at the beginning of a rapid growth cycle compared to its counterparts in tech — such as mobile, e-commerce and advertising — which are reaching saturation, are finding themselves in the cross hairs of anti-trust and are susceptible to consumer spending changes.”

There are a lot of cloud software bulls and for good reason, this category has treated investors well with predictable revenue growth. Cloud software is resilient because it drives down costs and increases productivity. We know this scenario well as we wrote about it many times in the past few years to defend cloud. Often, cloud selloffs were welcomed to position for a 6-month bounce back after the category sold off (40%) or more. I pointed this out in the past on the free side and here on MarketWatch (behind paywall) in 2019 (i.e., when we weren’t facing a brick wall on growth).

The issue with this assumption is that Cloud growth is actually slowing downCloud growth is actually slowing down —- that is the reality of things —- and this wasn’t true in 2019 and hasn’t been true in the last decade. Couple this with weak bottom lines that require cash injections, and what get is a sector that is largely out of favor.

What Analysts are Saying about the Big 3

Institutional analysts are able to do channel checks. It doesn’t hurt to see if there is more information available directly from large cloud customers.

Here are some recent analyst notes:

BMO Capital analyst Keith Bachman said until Azure growth stabilizes, the shares are likely to be range bound. The firm believes there is too much remaining uncertainty on Azure, which represents about 31% of BMO's revenue estimates.

Piper Sandler analyst Thomas Champion said that the Alphabet’s Q4 revenue and EBITDA missed across the board with advertising trends slightly weaker than expected, driven especially by Network. Search growth also slowed and Cloud growth decelerated 550 basis points. He further said Alphabet is transitioning the cost base for slower growth.

Piper Sandler analyst said that the Amazon’s Q4 results were mostly positive with revenues topping the high end of the guidance range. However, Amazon's guidance was slightly weak as Consumers sound cautious and the Cloud deceleration cadence appears to be landing in the mid-teens for Q1. The analyst believes management comments suggest the company is still navigating a difficult stretch.

Interesting enough, Dan Ives lowered his price target on Microsoft following earnings, yet has raised the price target again recently stating:

[…] [Wedbush is] "seeing steady cloud enterprise spending for Microsoft that has stabilized from the softness we saw in the month of December." Wedbush added that Microsoft, along with cloud competitors such as Amazon (AMZN), Google (GOOG), Oracle (ORCL), and IBM (IBM), are "seeing a surge of Beltway cloud deal activity in 2023 with a major shift to cloud underway from the Pentagon to civil agencies in the 202 area code."

More on Best-of-Breed

To help illustrate how the deceleration is quite steep for some best-of-breed names, we took a sample of the top-ranking cloud stocks on revenue growth, free cash flow, adjusted operating margin and/or valuations.

Among the best-of-breed cloud stocks, only ServiceNow’s guide shows sequential growth. The company’s QoQ growth was 7% last year and is expected to be 8% this year. The largest deceleration was in GitLab, with revenue that grew 12% QoQ last year, is expected to decline (4%) sequentially this year.

Overall, the category is slowing down sequentially (a rather drastic) 83% for Q1 guides compared to the previous year — from an average of 12% QoQ last year to 2% QoQ growth this year.

As stated in our previous analysis, it’s assumed that H1 2022 was strong so YoY is less important than QoQ/YoY. This is because the cloud slowdown happened later in the market cycle with first management comments appearing in Q3.

For example, best-of-breed cloud reported a 71% slowdown in QoQ/YoY growth for Q4 guides and is now guiding for a 83% slowdown in QoQ/YoY growth for Q1 guides.

Best of Breed Cloud Report

Best-of-breed cloud reported a 71% slowdown in QoQ/YoY growth for Q4 guides and is now guiding for a 83% slowdown in QoQ/YoY growth for Q1 guides. – YCHARTS

Here is how this compares to last quarter when we were seeing a 2/3 slowdown from 17% to 5% when I stated:

“Yet, the Q4 guidance is out of character as we see a 2/3 decline in average sequential growth rate from 17% to 5%. This is the more severe drop off because Q4 2021 was much better than Q2 2022 in terms of the economy. However, my contention is that Q4 could be reflecting what is to come in 2023 rather a reflection of budgets from 2022 as the slowdown is more pronounced in Q4 than it has been in previous quarters from 2022.”

Q4 Guidance

Source: YCHARTS

Conclusion

Below is cloud’s price action since we last covered the weakness in this sector. This is despite a surprisingly strong January and February for tech.

Cloud's Price Action

Above is cloud’s price action since we last covered the weakness in this sector. This is despite a surprisingly strong January and February for tech. – YCHARTS

Both Bill.com and GitLab saw weak price action compared to the others, and coincidentally, both saw sequential growth turn negative. Prior to the current earnings reports, I spoke about Bill.com and GitLab specifically with Samuel Burke of Real Vision when I forecast there would be further weakness in this category.

Many cloud stocks are on thin ice in this regard, and I imagine that if/when more cloud stocks turn negative on a QoQ/YoY basis compared to last year, weak price action will follow.

Real Vision Tweet

Source: Beth Kindig speaks with Real Vision about the cloud slowdown – REAL VISIONBeth Kindig speaks with Real Vision about the cloud slowdown – REAL VISION

Every investor must determine their personal risk tolerance. The I/O Fund noticed unusually weak fundamentals in cloud in Q3 and re-allocated our positions to other sectors within tech at that time. However, we are hard at work in determining the one or two cloud positions we’d like to buy when this category reaches a bottom. We share our stock picks plus entries and exits with our premium members. You can learn more here.

Royston Roche, Equity Analyst at the I/O Fund, contributed to this article.

Please note: The I/O Fund conducts research and draws conclusions for the Fund’s positions. We then share that information with our readers. This is not a guarantee of a stock’s performance. Please consult your personal financial advisor before buying any stock in the companies mentioned in this analysis.

Posted in Cloud, Cloud Software, SoftwareLeave a Comment on Slowdown In Cloud Stocks On Thin Ice Following Q1 Guides

Slowing Growth In Cloud Stocks: When Will We Hit A Bottom

Posted on December 20, 2022June 30, 2026 by io-fund
Slowing Growth In Cloud Stocks: When Will We Hit A Bottom

This article was originally published on Forbes on Dec 15, 2022, 10:27pm ESTForbes on Dec 15, 2022, 10:27pm EST

Nearly all cloud companies are reporting a notable, sequential slowdown between Q3 to Q4. Amazon and Microsoft’s cloud infrastructure services slowed from mid-30 percent growth in prior years to 24 percent growth and 30% growth. Only a quarter ago – in Q2 – the growth was at 29 percent and 35%. This quarter marks a 5 percent decline sequentially, which is considered a rapid decline for these two companies.

For many more highly valued cloud software companies, the sequential decline is much steeper and is closer to a 15% sequential decline. On a YoY basis, the Q3 to Q4 growth is 70% lower than it was tracking last year. For example. Snowflake grew 15% QoQ last year and is expected to grow 3% QoQ this year, marking a 12 point decline in its growth rate. This is true for most best-of-breed cloud stocks.

We covered this point on popular cloud software stocks in granular detail in a premium note for our research Members when we said:

“In some ways, the Q4 guides – assuming most come in at or near those guides – marks a historic slowdown for cloud as it’s always been a resilient category.”

The question is, at this rate of rapid decline, when will we hit a bottom on slowing growth?

Gartner, a reputable and accurate third-party analyst firm, is indirectly calling for a bottom in cloud in 2022, per its recent two surveys. However, judging by the most recent earnings results provided by the Big 3 and cloud’s top performing stocks, I believe this could be premature and it’s more likely we bottom sometime in 2023.

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Gartner 2023 Surveys

In a recent report, Gartner predicted that in 2023, IT spending will recover from a notable low in 2022 in all areas except Data Center Systems. Devices will still remain negative to flat, yet show a remarkable recovery from (8.4%) to (0.6%), per the CFO 2023 survey. Software will accelerate from 8% to 11.3% while IT services will double in growth from 4.2% to 7.9%.

Across all categories of IT spending, Gartner is calling for combined growth of 5.1% in IT budgets compared to 0.8% growth in 2022. This will be down from 10.2% in 2021.

Gatner Forecasted IT Budget for 2021-2023

Gartner is also forecasting that 2022 is the bottom for a few public cloud end-user verticals with a year-over-year increase in software-as-a-service (SaaS), cloud management and security, and infrastructure-as-a-service (IaaS).

Of these, Cloud IaaS is expected to see the most growth from 27% in 2022 to 30% in 2023. This is on a large revenue base of $115 billion, expected to grow to $150 billion in 2023. Software-as-a-service is the largest category in cloud with revenue of $167 billion, expected to grow to $195 billion at a rate of 17%.

Notably, some areas are expected to decline, such as BPaaS and DaaS.

Gartner Public Cloud End-User Spending 2023

Shown below, the overall cloud market is expected to grow 21%, up from 19% in 2022. This will outpace overall IT spending with growth of 5.1% by over 5X.

The 5.1% growth lags the current inflation rate of 6.5%.

Public Cloud End-User Spending

Source: Gartner: Public Cloud End-User Spending

Cloud IaaS Growth Saw 3% Headwind in 2022, More to Come?

Gartner released the 2023 survey results in October, and later that month, Q3 earnings results from Big Tech reported a decline in Cloud IaaS. Perhaps the survey is predicting a rebound from H2 2022 to H1 2023, but this would be hard to determine until budgets are set in the earlier part of next year.

In most cases, we are seeing a 10% deceleration from the early part of the year to the second half of the year. For now, actual results from the Big 3 Cloud IaaS providers disagree with Gartner’s survey predictions that a rebound is coming. This is despite Cloud IaaS predicted to be the more resilient line item in public cloud end-user spending.

CY 2022 growth rates for Cloud IAAS
CY 2022 Growth Rates for Cloud Iaas

The biggest names in tech are reporting their earnings right now, and our premium members are getting updates almost daily. Learn more about about our premium membership here.The biggest names in tech are reporting their earnings right now, and our premium members are getting updates almost daily. Learn more about about our premium membership here.Learn more about about our premium membership here.

Mixed Reports Following Q3 Results

Gartner’s prediction that cloud budgets will expand contrasts with other surveys that suggest the opposite. For example, according to a survey by Wanclouds, 81% of companies were directed by the C-suite to reduce cloud spending or to occur no additional costs.

The venture capital firm Accel published a report that showed private funding for cloud companies dropped as much as 42% across Europe, Israel and the United States in Q3. This often translates to lower valuations and/or lacking a clear path to a strong exit on the public markets or through an acquisition.

This doesn’t mean the migration to the cloud is slowing down, by any means. According to Accel, spending on automation and digital transformation is expected to rise from $1.8 trillion to $2.8 trillion by 2025. The drawback to these kinds of forecasts is that it may slow considerably in 2023 before a rebound occurs.

Conclusion:

Cloud spending may turn out to be softer than industry surveys indicate, especially until inflation cools off. This is because surveys capture a perception while earnings results are the culmination of a 7.1% inflation rate, plus a softer Chinese market and a softer European market.

The Big 3 are the best proxy because their reports represent the layer in the tech stack that tends to be the most resilient in terms of churn. The switching costs are quite high for cloud IaaS services. The Big 3 also afford a more concentrated view by owning 66% of market share across three companies whereas SaaS is spread across thousands of companies.

For our premium members, we dig deeper into mid-cap cloud companies to determine which ones are decelerating more quickly than their peers and also which leading cloud stocks we plan to buy when we sense there is a rebound. You can learn more here.

Please note: The I/O Fund conducts research and draws conclusions for the Fund’s positions. We then share that information with our readers. This is not a guarantee of a stock’s performance. Please consult your personal financial advisor before buying any stock in the companies mentioned in this analysis.

Posted in Cloud, Cloud Platforms, Cloud Software, SoftwareLeave a Comment on Slowing Growth In Cloud Stocks: When Will We Hit A Bottom

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