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Just noticed something worth paying attention to in the broader tech investment landscape. Cloud computing stocks are quietly becoming one of the most interesting plays right now, especially with everything that's happening around AI infrastructure.
So here's the thing about cloud computing - it's basically the backbone of how companies are scaling their AI operations. Instead of building and maintaining their own servers, organizations are increasingly moving their workloads to cloud providers. The real catalyst though? AI has completely changed the game. Companies are now using cloud infrastructure to either customize existing AI models or build their own from scratch. This has created massive demand that's driving serious growth across the sector.
Let me break down three of the biggest players worth watching.
Amazon basically invented this whole space. AWS is still the dominant force with around 30% market share, and it's not slowing down. Last quarter AWS revenue hit $29.3 billion, up 17% year-over-year, while operating income jumped 22% to $11.5 billion. What's interesting is how they're positioning themselves - Bedrock lets customers tap into top-tier AI models and customize them, while SageMaker gives them tools to build models from the ground up. Plus, Amazon built its own custom AI chips through Annapurna Labs. Their Trainium handles model training and Inferentia handles inference. The efficiency play here is real - custom chips beat out standard GPUs on both cost and power consumption.
Microsoft Azure is the dark horse that's actually gaining serious ground. They've been posting 30%+ growth for seven straight quarters, hitting 33% last quarter, which has pushed their market share to around 22%. Their partnership with OpenAI is a huge advantage - customers get direct access to OpenAI's models integrated right into their applications. But here's what caught my attention: they're not just relying on one AI partner anymore. They're hosting models from xAI and they brought on DeepMind's co-founder to develop their own models. That diversification could be a major play.
Alphabet's Google Cloud is smaller than the other two at around 12% market share, but it just hit a profitability inflection point. First quarter showed Google Cloud revenue climbing 28% year-over-year to $12.3 billion with operating income surging 142% to $2.2 billion. That's the kind of operating leverage you see when a high-fixed-cost business finally scales. Their Vertex AI platform and Kubernetes technology give them solid differentiation, plus they developed Gemini, one of the most advanced foundation models out there. Like the others, they built custom AI chips too, partnering with Broadcom to keep costs down.
The macro trend here is pretty clear - cloud computing stocks are benefiting massively from this AI infrastructure buildout. There are risks, sure (overbuilding unused capacity is a real concern), but the demand side looks incredibly strong. If you're thinking about exposure to how AI is actually being deployed and scaled, these three companies represent the core infrastructure play. This is one of those rare moments where the biggest players are also the best positioned to dominate.