We Study Billionaires - The Investor’s Podcast Network - TIP813: Microsoft (MSFT): Is Microsoft a Misunderstood AI Opportunity? w/ Daniel Mahncke & Shawn O’Malley
Episode Date: May 7, 2026Daniel Mahncke and Shawn O'Malley take a deep dive into Microsoft — the $3 trillion incumbent whose entire investment thesis now hinges on two of the most contested questions in technology: whether ...AI will reinforce or quietly dismantle the software franchises that built the company, and whether the OpenAI partnership is the strategic masterstroke it appeared to be in 2023, or a relationship that is slowly turning from asset into liability. IN THIS EPISODE YOU’LL LEARN: 00:00:00 - Intro 00:01:27 - About all major business units 00:12:05 - How LinkedIn’s business works 00:18:24 - How the cloud business keeps growing 00:21:17 - What the future plans for gaming are 00:24:49 - Why the Office products might be in danger 00:50:52 - How AI is challenging Microsoft’s software 00:55:10 - Who captures the most value from AI 01:22:46 - Whether Shawn and Daniel add MSFT to the Intrinsic Value Portfolio Disclaimer: Slight discrepancies in the timestamps may occur due to podcast platform differences. BOOKS AND RESOURCES Join the exclusive TIP Mastermind Community. Microsoft Investor Relations. World Economic Forum Interview with CEO. Follow Daniel on X and Linkedin. Follow Shawn on X and Linkedin. Related books mentioned in the podcast. Ad-free episodes on our Premium Feed. NEW TO THE SHOW? Get smarter about valuing businesses through The Intrinsic Value Newsletter. Check out The Investor’s Podcast Starter Packs. Follow our official social media accounts: X | LinkedIn | Facebook. Try our tool for picking stock winners and managing our portfolios: TIP Finance. Enjoy exclusive perks from our favorite Apps and Services. Learn how to better start, manage, and grow your business with the best business podcasts. SPONSORS Support our free podcast by supporting our sponsors: HardBlock Human Rights Foundation Plus500 Netsuite Shopify Vanta References to any third-party products, services, or advertisers do not constitute endorsements, and The Investor’s Podcast Network is not responsible for any claims made by them. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://theinvestorspodcastnetwork.supportingcast.fm
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You're listening to TIP.
Microsoft is, without a doubt, still one of the highest mode businesses in the world,
but I would still say that it's in a very critical transition phase that it has to nail now.
You're not used to seeing the market doubt Microsoft the way it currently is.
Usually this is one of the most stable Mag 7 companies out there.
But that's also where it might be a rare opportunity to buy Microsoft at historically low multiples today.
We did that with Google and it was our most successful investment last year, and today we will see if Microsoft can become our most successful investment this year.
Since 2014, with more than 200 million downloads, we have interviewed the world's best investors, studied deeply the principles of value investing and uncovered many compelling investment opportunities.
We focus on understanding businesses and intrinsic value, investing accordingly and sharing everything we learn with you.
This show is not investment advice. It's intended for informational and entertainment purposes only.
All opinions expressed by hosts and guests are solely their own, and they may have investments
in the securities discussed. Now for your hosts, Sean O'Malley and Daniel Manker.
For long-term investors, the current market in some ways might look like a gift because you have
some great companies that have sold off to attractive prices. And today, we are talking about
company that has dominated the last 30 years of American tech like few others.
And despite what have looked like very solid numbers from this company in the last quarter,
the stock sold off 35% in the last six months.
So that's exactly what I'm talking about.
And that means Microsoft, the company of interest today is now trading at a forward PE of
just 20 times earnings.
And mind you that, just six months ago, investors were still
willing to pay 40 times earnings for this company.
And it's even more interesting if you compare how Google and Microsoft have performed since
ChachyPD came out, because I still remember that, you know, Chad GPD was supposed to be
the end of Google and Microsoft through owning a stake in Open AI was kind of seen as the big
AI winner among the Mac 7.
And then now, fast forward a little more than three years.
And Google is up 200 percent.
And Microsoft is kind of trailing Google significantly.
Yeah, looking at the stock charts.
It's kind of surprising to me that Microsoft stock has never really benefited from the hype
around chat, GBT.
I mean, there are very few times in the last three years when it outperformed Google
comparatively, right?
It is a bit surprising, although it also depends on when you start the comparison.
I mean, if we look at the chart starting in late 2022, it doesn't look like any significant
outperformance, but if we start from early 2022, things look quite different.
So essentially, what you would see is that Microsoft, thanks to it,
stake in Open AI. We covered significantly faster from this big tech drawdown that I think we've all
still remember in 2022. And then the underperformance really only started a couple of months ago
when, you know, Google started rallying and everybody's thinking of Google as like the big
AI winner. And then Microsoft and Open AI kind of got into the backseat.
I mean, it makes sense because Microsoft was definitely at a time seen as the biggest winner
of the AI revolution, really generally in the markets, but especially among the Mag 7.
But before we lose ourselves on a Google tangent, how about you just quickly give an introduction
into why the Microsoft stock has performed so poorly in recent months?
And then we can go into the details of the business and assess whether we think the market
is wrong or right about Microsoft.
I mean, generally, Microsoft as well as also some SaaS companies, have we covered a little bit
in the last couple of weeks.
But still, I mean, if you compare to Google, it is certainly crazy to see how the narrative
shifted and also how quickly that happened. So to sort of frame the episode today, I would say that
today's goal is to figure out whether Microsoft now isn't a similar position to Alphabet back in early
2025. It's a great business and it has been a great business at that time. But I think it was
temporarily kind of misunderstood by the market. And that's also why we wanted to buy the stock back
down. And since then, it has performed incredibly well for us. So we kind of did what all value investors
would do. And yeah, I think those are the situations we look for.
And when I saw some tweets about Microsoft and also the general multiples it's trading at,
I felt like it has to be a company that we cover.
And by the way, we just came back from Omaha.
And it just came to my mind because I got a couple of questions on Microsoft, AI,
and also SaaS in general when I was there.
And I just wanted to take the opportunity and thank everyone who made it to our little conference.
I think it was a fantastic experience.
We met so many of you and we were also able to exchange ideas and opinions on the market.
it's just incredible how Omaha feels like this place, maybe the only place on earth where you can
talk about stocks and investing for many, many hours without borrowing anyone. And I don't know,
it just gives me a whole lot of energy. Oh, absolutely. I mean, we're not even halfway through
2026. And I think it's pretty safe to say that Omaha was once again one of the biggest highlights
of the year already. And after this conference, I'm pretty confident we should make it even bigger
next year. I don't know what you think, Daniel, but maybe we should really scale this thing up. More
stock pitches, more opportunities to connect and ask questions. And whenever you do a conference for
the first time, you're not sure how things are going to turn out. But I think for both of us,
I can say that it really exceeded our expectations. And we're really excited about continuing
to do this as tradition alongside Berkshire weekend going forward. Absolutely. I mean, it was the first
year without Buffett. I know that you've been there when Mongo was also still there. So I felt like,
you know, it needed a bit more energy. And hopefully for a lot of people there, I don't know,
our kind of little conference could bring that.
And maybe it also helped the sentiment that, you know,
stocks started to recover a bit in the weeks before Berkshire.
Microsoft, again, has also seen a small rally recently.
I think it's about 10, 15% up if you look at it just from the lows.
And I would still say it is on the cheaper side.
And I think it's safe to say that the prior sell-off,
just looking at the numbers, was overblown.
I mean, the stock was down 23% after its earnings report at the end of January.
And when that's the case, you would usually think that, you know,
they reported some terrible.
numbers, but instead they grew the top line about 17%. Operating income grew 21% and earnings were
actually up 60%. And all of that on a base of $350 billion in revenue. So that's just incredible.
And part of the market's disappointment was that Azure, which is, of course, Microsoft's cloud
business, only grew 39% instead of the expected 40%. Gosh, Daniel, what a terrible miss.
How could they drop the ball so badly? 39% grew.
growth? Come on. I know, it's outrageous, but no, jokes aside, I mean, the market also
disliked the mess of CAPEX investments, right? So long story short, the earnings reaction is
certainly overblown. However, I got to say that there are some potential long-term risks
that are certainly worth looking into. You touched on the CAPEX investments. And so are these
your long-term concerns around Microsoft being more capital intensive, essentially while
yielding comparatively lower rates of return on those investments as they have in the past,
or is something else on your mind in terms of the risk profile for Microsoft?
That's one of the things that the market is scared about and, you know, Wall Street talks a lot
about it and we will certainly get into that. But I think personally I see bigger risks for
especially the legacy office product. And that's still a huge part of profits. And also kind
of a key part of how Microsoft's business model actually generates profits and works in general.
I mean, Microsoft excels, no pun intended, and kind of bundling products, and they are just a master copycat.
And all of that is a bit more difficult in the age of AI.
And I think that's what we get into.
But perhaps I'm also just a bit naive on the cloud investments.
I mean, just as with Amazon and Google, I'm kind of convinced that Azure will grow into the demand.
And even if they're overbuilt capacity and let's say the short term, I just don't see that as a long-term drag on the overall business.
I think the bigger question is what happens to the $70 billion.
a profit pool still sitting inside their software business.
And without spoiling too much, I think it's safe to say that there's a lot to talk about
today.
And I see surprisingly many posts, especially on social media, asking whether they even is
somewhat of a reasonable bare case to make for Microsoft.
And I do think that's the case.
I was actually surprised by how many things, maybe how complex the business is and how
many challenges it's going to face when I started my research.
I don't think that has been the case, at least to the same extent, when we looked at
Google back last year.
So we recently had a call in our mastermind community about moats and particularly switching
cost modes.
And Microsoft naturally came up as one of the most entrenched companies in the enterprise
software world.
But listening to the thoughts of some of our members who work in and with AI daily and who
work at some of the most tech forward companies in the world, it did give me some pause and
how they think about things.
So I do agree that it's certainly a more challenging position that Google will.
was in when we first looked at it. But before we end all that, give us an overview of Microsoft's
business first. There's so much to cover that we need really firstly an idea of what we're getting
into here. I think you mentioned before that. Everybody knows Microsoft, but actually getting
into the business and they're in so many different segments, it kind of helps to just give an overview
because it's such a huge and complex business. So generally, Microsoft has three different
overarching business segments. And really the power of Microsoft has always been about the way those
segments and also those products in this segments reinforce each other. So the first segment is
called productivity and business processes. And this is, you know, the classic Microsoft, as
at least, you know, what I think of when I think of Microsoft. So you have the office tools
that are now sold almost entirely as a cloud subscription called Microsoft 365 or 365. And then you
of Teams, which is their enterprise collaboration platform here internally at TIP.
We mostly use Slack, but it's basically the same thing.
Then you have Outlook for emails, which is the same thing to Gmail from Google.
Then you have SharePoint and LinkedIn, which I constantly forget that it even is a part of
Microsoft.
And then you have things like Dynamics, which is kind of their enterprise resource planning
suite.
And this entire segment is generating about $120 billion a year.
And it's still growing in the mid-teens.
And I mean, the margins look fantastic.
It's approaching about 60% operating margins, which makes it really one of the most profitable
software businesses the world has ever seen.
And it's incredible to see those growth rates in a business that feels like it's been
around for decades, which it has.
And the products in many ways have really not changed and are still doing that well.
I mean, Excel might look a bit different.
You know, it's cosmetically definitely improved.
but generally, it is functionally the same product today as it was 20 years ago in many of the most important ways.
The reason office 365 is so doable is that it's generally woven into the daily workflow of hundreds of millions of people and companies worldwide.
So there's a reason we used Excel repeatedly in our constellation and topic as episodes to kind of explain how exactly horizontal market software works.
And that mostly is that it dominates so many different industries, pretty much exactly the opposite.
of vertical market software. And the same is true for PowerPoint and Word. And they are even the standard
now when you work with AI. So I usually work in Google Sheets, but when I work with Cloud, for example,
it kind of defaults to Excel. And that tells you something, I think, about the, you know,
formats to ability. Yeah, we'll certainly talk more about that because it's important to today's
conversation. But I would like to go just on a short tangent about LinkedIn. I'm just looking at the
number state, I'm surprised at the size of the business. And
It does not look like a bad deal in hindsight at all, right?
Microsoft bought it for $25 billion in 2016, and a lot of people thought that they overpaid at the time.
And now it has nearly a billion members in something like $18 billion in revenue,
which I'm not sure how because I've tried some of the various LinkedIn premium offerings
to connect with advertisers.
And yeah, long story short, I got really no payoff at all from it.
And so clearly, people savvier than me are finding it worthwhile.
to pay for premium LinkedIn, even though I almost certainly disregard every sponsored message
I get on LinkedIn.
Yeah, it seems that also for me, kind of my first instinct is to question everything that
sounds good and comes my way through LinkedIn.
So I was a bit surprised when I saw those numbers too, but there are generally three ways
LinkedIn makes money.
And the flagship product is LinkedIn recruiter.
So basically a seat-based subscription that costs about $900 per seat per month.
So it's certainly targeted at this corporate tier.
So it's nothing that you and I would buy.
And they basically give recruiters access to the full billion plus member database with
advanced search filters.
And there's also a light version of that.
I think that's about $170 per month.
And beyond that, companies mainly pay for promoted postings and also some labor market
analytics products.
So they actually run at about $6,000 to $20,000 per year, which is kind of insane to me.
Because if you think about that, on the high end, that's the cost of a Bloomberg terminal.
And then you have talent solutions, which is probably the most cyclical business because it directly tracks hiring activity.
So when companies freeze hiring, as happened in late 22 and also late 2023, revenue just takes a direct hit.
And that's why LinkedIn's growth also slowed.
If you look at the chart, you would see that to single digits recently, despite the platform still growing in users.
And the second big pillar, and this is what I was using, is marketing solutions and advertising.
And so that's around a $6 to $7 billion business, I understand.
And you know, you can see the high quality audience that LinkedIn has based on the
CPMs that they charge that's an advertising rate term.
And they're meaningfully higher than other social media platforms.
And that's because it's primarily B2B marketing.
If you're selling enterprise software or professional services, LinkedIn's targeting by
job title, seniority, and industry is, it is objectively incredibly robust.
And I saw that for myself.
My problem was in getting people to respond to messages after I identified who the right
contact was, but I digress.
So, you know, finding the right person is great.
If there's a culture of ignoring DMs on LinkedIn, there are limits to how much that can
be monetized.
But anyways, nevertheless, marketers generally do accept this higher cost per click rate on
LinkedIn, the higher CPMs, because conversion rates are either higher or just the leads they're
getting are more valuable.
As listeners can see,
Sean is kind of a grudge when it comes to LinkedIn.
I mean,
probably it also takes some time to kind of,
you know,
figure out how to exactly work with it and,
and, you know,
see how you can make or get most value out of it.
I think a lot of people are.
Otherwise, you know,
they wouldn't have those numbers.
Although they do seem a bit surprising to me as well.
The last part that we have now talked about is premium subscriptions.
And there's basically the career option.
If you look for a job, for example,
and then there's the business and sales navigator.
And this part of the business is growing the fastest, but it also is the smallest of the three buckets.
So I think generally, LinkedIn, despite unsuccessful use of it, is a much better business than I expected when I just started my research here.
And it would actually be interesting to see what it would be valued at if it were a standalone business.
Because it's not a vital part of Microsoft.
And I think as long as Microsoft owns it, I just don't see how it would ever grow to a size or especially a revenue pool where it makes any difference for the overall.
investment thesis on Microsoft.
So to get back to the Office product, they also count in this first segment.
And as most probably know, the Office Suite went through kind of similar changes to our
portfolio holding Adobe about 15 years ago.
So originally, they were basically sold as this perpetual license.
I still remember in school when you had Office 97, when they didn't upgrade it for a long
time, or maybe Windows XP, where basically those products were bought at a store and then once
you had them, you owned them forever.
So for Microsoft, that would basically mean that you book all the revenue immediately, but also
you had no idea what the next quarter would actually look like.
And when you move from selling office for, let's say, a $400 one-time payment to only charging
$12 per user per month on what is mostly like an auto-renewing subscription, revenue becomes
recurring and predictable.
And that's what Adobe wanted.
That's also what Microsoft wanted.
And that's why they went through this change.
I think it's also important to know that, and we said it for Adobe too, this hasn't been, you
the new holy grail when it came out.
Like a lot of people who are acting like you basically lose out on, you know, $400
that you immediately can get by hoping people would stick with your product for only $12
a month.
Today, though, Microsoft has 450 million commercial seats, which is just incredible if you
think about it, at an average of roughly $25 per user per month.
So that's generating over about $130 billion per year in essentially pure recurring revenue.
So that's just an incredible business.
again, it's also high margin. So this segment alone makes about $77 billion in operating profits.
And if you adjust for LinkedIn that we just talked about and some of the other smaller
operations in this segment, I think there's an argument to make that probably about $70 billion
comes from only the software solutions alone. So we are talking Word, we're talking PowerPoint,
and we're talking Excel. And if you just think about that, it's an incredible business,
especially if you think about the 20, 30 years that it's already operating. But also, I mean,
And that single profit pool is larger than the total revenue of most S&P 500 companies
and at 60% margins that kind of feels ripe for disruption, right?
Especially if you think about AI coming, you can kind of get a glimpse that this might
not work for the next, let's say, 20 years.
Right.
And so then the CEO of Microsoft, Satya Nadella, has said in public on multiple occasions
that software apps could just go away, vanish.
And that's a pretty remarkable thing for any CEO to say.
especially when that would be incredibly bearish for you as a company, right?
It's not something I would have expected him to say publicly.
On one of our last episodes, we actually talked just recently about the fact that no CEO
sees their own company threatened by AI, at least not publicly.
And then Satya Nadella came out and has pretty much done that.
Although, to be fair, he's also doing that while expecting Microsoft to become a winner
in this new era of AI.
So he's technically also just marketing Microsoft's new
products when he does that. It's kind of similar to what
States Force's CEO, Mark Beniof also did, right? So basically the question for us as
potential investors is how much of that $70 billion survives this AI transition?
And also, how long would that transition take? And what does Microsoft replace it with,
right? If you don't just want to lose the customer, you have to give them something else.
And we will come back to this detail. It's kind of more than a detail. It's basically the whole
story about Microsoft. But for the sake of keeping it simple, I would say we first finish the
segment overview. Because I know,
We're teasing a lot today, but that's just because I fear we will kind of forget things
when we're not at least going through the business segment one by one.
So the second big segment is Intelligent Cloud.
And that's also where Azure is basically the core of, but you also have things like SQL servers,
Windows servers, and GitHub.
And this segment generates about $125 billion in annualized revenue.
So it's about the same size as the first one.
However, it is growing at 29% per year.
And that's a lot more than the first segment, right?
Azure itself actually has a run rate by now of $75 billion per year, and it's growing at almost
40%. Again, only 39. What a bummer. In contrast, though, to almost every other Microsoft product,
Azure is not a subscription, but a consumption-based model. That's also what we've seen with a lot
of the other clouds. They basically all work the same. So you pay based on how much you actually
use the product. And this means that, you know, revenue can pretty much grow explosively in periods
where you have rapid adoption, but then when customers become more efficient with using your
product, which just naturally happens as they kind of master the platform, the revenue can also
de-accelerate, right? And that's what you've seen, for example, in this optimization cycle that
2022 and 2023 have been. And then it's not really accelerating because you just had this new AI
wave that basically created a whole new vector of demand. I mean, we've kind of laughed at it,
but it is absurd if this premise is true that the cloud business is growing at 39 percent,
And that is the reason, you know, falling short of some sort of market expectations for the stock to sell off.
But before we go deeper, there is one more segment we need to talk about.
So what is the third segment?
The third segment is more personal computing.
And that's where you have Windows, Xbox, Surface devices.
And since late 2023, you also have a gaming business because you basically bought Activision Blizzard for $75 billion.
dollars. By the way, that's the biggest gaming acquisition people have ever seen. And it's not
like it didn't make any impact. I mean, gaming for Microsoft is a business also generating about
$43 billion in revenue. So it's not nothing. I mean, Xbox GamePairs, for example, has about
40 million monthly subscribers. But this segment is certainly the lowest margin and it's also the
lowest growing of the three. So again, kind of like with LinkedIn, it's somewhat of a great
and interesting business, but it's also not central to why you would own the stock today. I still want
to shortly touch on the gaming business store.
Also, because I know that we got some feedback when I said that I would cover Microsoft
that some people are interested in, so we'll talk about it.
And I want to say it's interesting that if you spend $75 billion on an acquisition, again,
the biggest in gaming history, and I actually checked it, roughly double what Disney paid
for Lucasfilm and Marvel combined.
I kind of assume that you have a good plan for the IP that you bought.
So, for example, what is that?
You have Call of Duty, which has sold tens of millions of copies annually for almost two decades.
you have World of Warcraft, which also still has millions of paying subscribers,
and then a bit lower quality, but also more people playing it, Candy Crush,
which has hundreds of millions of monthly mobile users.
And I would say that the main idea has probably been to turn these games,
maybe except for Candy Crush, into system sellers for Xbox and their game pass.
And basically making it a no-brainer subscription for every game out there.
It's kind of like what we talked about with Netflix,
where they wanted to buy even more IP,
so that subscribing to Netflix just feels like a number.
no-brainer if you think about the competition.
I think it's safe to say that for Netflix, it worked.
For Microsoft, it didn't work at all.
It clearly hasn't happened.
I didn't ever at any point saw more people buy an Xbox or buy an GamePass.
So now Microsoft has essentially stopped trying to win this traditional console race.
It's also something that we talked about with Nintendo.
And it's kind of pivoting to what they call an Xbox Everywhere strategy.
So essentially that would mean that you can access the Game Pass across.
devices and cloud infrastructure, and you're not dependent on actually owning an Xbox anymore.
I think they will not stop producing an Xbox. There's this project which is codenamed Project
Helix and it's rumored to play both PC and Xbox games. I think to me it sounds like a great
idea on paper, but I kind of lack conviction that Microsoft can actually pull this off, just given
how little they have done with the acquisition of Activision so far.
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It doesn't seem like too bad of my idea.
We just saw the huge success of the Switch 2.
So consoles, though, are getting more and more expensive.
And focusing on an ecosystem around something with much cheaper and more flexibility,
seems like a pretty good option to me.
But maybe the way to think about it is the Netflix of gaming of sorts.
And you have this huge library of games that you can access no matter where you're
are, and regardless of what type of hardware you're using, that feels like really democratizing
gaming in a way.
I guess you can view this as either an upside optionality or also potential opportunity
cost.
But no matter how this turns out again, it will be relatively unimportant to the overall
thesis for Microsoft.
All right, well, let's get back to the topics that are key to the thesis and talk more
about the office products in particular.
So I think there are two ways this segment could get disrupted going forward.
The first is by facing competitors that have a new chance of disrupting the office ecosystem
by leveraging AI more effectively.
And so one of our mastermind members just recently posted a chart that applies Clayton Christensen's
disruptive innovation theory to Google's and Microsoft's Productivity Suite and basically
asked, why couldn't Google disrupt Microsoft Office?
after winning the lower end of customers.
And so Christensen's model for context predicts that a cheaper, initially inferior competitor
enters at the lower end of the market and then improves over time and eventually marches
upmarket to displace the incumbent.
And so Google launched docs, sheets, and slides all the way back in 2006.
And they won the low end of the market.
You had a lot of individuals, students, and small businesses that,
really rely on those products, including ourselves. And then still 20 years later, Microsoft Office
completely dominates at the enterprise level, right? Large corporations are not using Google Sheets.
So if you assume the average time it takes the new competitor to catch up based on Christensen's
model, the crossover where Google's products should have met the demand of more professional
users, well, that should have happened in 2018. So the interesting question to me is, why
Why has that not happened?
I still remember that many, many years ago, before I started investing and kind of
of ever heard of things like a mode or switching costs, I used Google Docs for the first time
that was still back in school.
And I immediately asked myself, why does anyone still ever use Word?
And funnily enough, I never used Google Docs again up until I started at TIP.
So that kind of explained it.
But anyway, now I kind of know about things like modes and like switching costs.
And I would say there are multiple reasons why Google didn't succeed and kind of disreferred.
interrupting Microsoft's office suite.
So the first is that Christensen's model was mainly built around hardware innovation
and products not embedded in these larger ecosystems that we currently see, right?
So software with dominant file format standards is kind of different.
You know, the word, the Excel and the power performance have become international standards,
pretty much embedded in, you know, contracts, legal filings, and just all sorts of documents
across millions of organizations.
And this kind of reminds me of Adobe's mode regarding the PDF file.
format. So you as a person, or even as a company, you just can switch unilaterally. Your entire
professional ecosystem has to switch kind of simultaneously. And now it is relatively easy to convert
a Google sheet into an Excel file. But that's where you get to the second reason for why Google's
workspace couldn't disrupt Microsoft. And that is that at the high end, especially for enterprises,
the users are still doing fundamentally different jobs than the average users. So the Excel power user,
building, I don't know, a leveraged biot model, custom VBA macros, they don't use Google
sheets because Google Sheets just doesn't offer all the same features. And even if the majority
of employees don't need those features, as long as any meaningful number does, so let's say,
you know, the Enterprise has 5% of their spreadsheets that are way too complex for Google Sheets,
then they still need to just stick with Excel because, first of all, those 5% of
sheets might be the most important in the company. And also, you would just make sure that
everyone in your company can use the product, even the top 5% of users.
And to be fair, Microsoft has not entirely just stood still.
They ran their own counter-disruption effort by launching Office 365, which offered cloud
delivery, automatic updates, and collaborative editing as well.
Microsoft did try to adjust, although I have to say that working collaboratively in a word
document is a complete nightmare.
while it works great in Google Docs.
So I would somewhat question how successful those adjustments actually were.
And that perhaps the last reason are just that you don't only have network effects within
your own company, but also with people from other companies that want to receive a file
in a certain format.
And also that switching software in large enterprises is just always a headache.
And there's a huge bias to just stick with what works.
I actually talked to Clay a couple of weeks ago for one of our last episodes.
And he just talked about, you know, prior in his corporate life, how difficult it could be to actually change software at like a big corporation.
And it's such a huge headache that even if there's some value to gain and you may be a bit more effective, you generally just don't do it.
So the takeaway for me is that Christensen's model was right for the bottom half of the market.
But it wasn't good enough or maybe there was too much of a change to disrupt the enterprise level.
So you told me offline that AI may be able to change that dynamic.
And so maybe we can reopen the door to the conversation of the innovator's dilemma still
being relevant and Google finding a way to disrupt Microsoft's basically legendary productivity
suite.
Is that something that's truly possible?
I think we can.
I think the innovator's dilemma is not yet dead.
So basically, Google failed to disrupt the office suite because Google was offering a competing
product and a competing product always runs into kind of the same structural barriers that we just
describe. What AI is doing, at least I would argue, is categorically different. So AI is not
offering a competing product per se. AI is essentially reducing the need for the product.
So when someone used Google Docs instead of Word, they were still spending the same amount of
human time creating documents, basically just in a different environment, right? So the job was to
create a document and then Google was a different tool for the same job. But when someone uses an
LLM to generate a first draft in, let's say, 30 seconds and then spends 20 minutes editing rather
than two hours actually creating that first draft, they fundamentally changed the human
labor intensity of their task. And Microsoft's perceived subscription-based model is kind of
build on the assumption that you need one license for each human doing cognitive work. So if AI
handles a meaningful share of that cognitive work, then the per seat assumption kind of stops
working. That is kind of why the $70 billion profit pool is at risk in a way that Google without
AI could have never threatened it. So compared to Constellation software, for example, where the AI risk
is mostly that there will be competing products made with AI. The AI threat here is not about
switching to a different product. It's that you need fewer seats because each human,
is now doing the work of what several would have previously been capable of.
Exactly.
And I mean, this is not a new argument either, right?
We basically discussed the same thing for almost all SaaS companies that we looked at here
on the show.
And I would say what makes this a bit different in my mind is that most other high-quality SaaS
companies that we discussed prior kind of still had a unique product.
I mean, no other company can currently at least do what Adobe does.
And the same might be true for Salesforce, although to a much,
as a extent. So for them, and especially a company like Salesforce, I think that the main problem
is that they will likely become some sort of database layer that is then used by AI agents instead
of human users. And I would argue that this reduces pricing power, but it's something that we
don't know yet and only the feature will tell. And I think that could happen to Microsoft's
office products as well. So companies don't have to abandon Word. They just keep Word as the final
format for the finished product. So they keep all the compliance workflows. They keep the governance
infrastructure that Microsoft offers, and they also continue renewing the Microsoft subscription,
which is obviously the biggest part of the profit pool. But while doing that, they just kind
of resist further price increases on, you know, many of the price increases that Microsoft has
basically come in form of new and more expensive bundles. So perhaps that's something that
Microsoft cannot do in the future as easy as, you know, has done that in the last two decades.
So basically that would mean that disruption not comes through this wave of cancellations,
but rather as RPU, so basically the average revenue per user, stagnating.
And, you know, companies just saying we don't pay more for the same product that we even use less than we did five years ago.
So even if the seed count hold, the perceived value of that seed would change.
And I remember that just a couple of years ago, it was one of the most normal things to list Excel as a skill on your CV.
So there were hundreds of courses online that, you know, taught upcoming investment bankers how to use Excel.
And I'm just thinking about this now, but to me, if it's somewhat ridiculous to still list Excel as a skill on your CV today, and I mean, you can just go into claw or open claw, whatever you use as your favorite LLM, and they will create a model with at least the same quality in a matter of minutes.
So this alone kind of shows you in a nutshell how much the skill advantage and the kind of embeddedness of a tool like Excel have been disrupted.
The day up-and-coming investment bankers stop listing Excel as a skill on their resumes,
that is the day I will declare Microsoft's office's moat as dead.
Obviously joking there, but when you go just app by app, it is pretty remarkable to see
the disruption, right?
Word is arguably the most exposed to disruption risks.
And so the activities that really represent the majority of time spent.
in Word, whether that's drafting from scratch, rewriting and restructuring, summarizing,
reformatting bodies of text.
That is precisely where large language models are already very good.
And we're honestly good at that a couple of years ago.
And so that is also probably the most use feature outside of AI power users, those purposes.
So, you know, we are guilty of that ourselves, although we certainly lack the skill or knowledge
to really manipulate Microsoft Suite as much as we could using different AI tools.
I just realized how little I know about LLMs when we recently had one of our, I would say,
AI experts lead a call in the community.
At least I wasn't alone because it turned into a hundred minute call just because no one
wanted it to stop.
And as you know, we even have a member who is part of OpenAI's team that is basically tasked
with training their models and all of the financial stuff.
And even for him, much of it was still new.
So I certainly came out of the call a lot more bullish on AI and also a lot less bullish on software,
not because it will go away, but simply because of this database agent dynamic that we discussed earlier.
And also the fact that everything we've seen up until now is still only the beginning.
So in theory, the tools that we currently use are the worst versions of LLMs and AI tools,
and they will only get better.
And that's kind of scary if you think about them,
and especially how much better they have gotten in the last just two years.
I mean, you said it.
You could basically draft a Word document two years ago,
but the amount of detailed work that, for example,
Claude can now do,
that's something that shared GDP a year ago just couldn't do.
Anyway, you're all right to say, though,
that Word is probably the most exposed.
And integrating copilot,
which is kind of Microsoft's answer to, you know, the other AI models,
just didn't really help either.
Not only is it very limited in what it can actually do,
at least with a satisfactory result,
but most people also just don't start in Word anymore.
So they go directly to Claude and then just make some final adjustments to the Word file that
Claude has generated.
So that's what baffles me because why does co-pilot struggle so much still with generating
useful output inside of Word, right?
I mean, it seems like creating tables or similar things like that are really what it struggles
with most.
And a lot of that stuff could really be a nightmare if you're having to do it yourself, right?
I mean, formatting things in Word has always been a problem throughout.
my entire life. It can drive you utterly crazy. And it seems like even with large language models,
Microsoft has not cracked the code on how to make Word useful to people, at least from reformatting
things. I was talking about that. Kind of gives me flashbacks to my Bachelor thesis. That was a nightmare.
I mean, not the thesis itself, but the formatting and Word. I mean, you want to change the positioning
of just one graph and your entire 100-page document is all over the place.
But yeah, letting that behind me to answer your question.
What was designed as a tool for human creation first?
And that's something that I also got as feedback, especially from programmers lately.
So the entire paradigm basically assumes that a human is doing the writing and the work inward.
And that makes it just not the best interface or just environment in general for NAI to do its work.
So something like LATAC, for example, is much better at that.
And that's, you know, the different angle of competitive pressure where you had Google prior
and now basically reducing this skill part of using Excel helps Google Sheets.
And at the other end of the spectrum, you might have tools that are just way more or way
better fitting for AI like latex.
And they could get a boost that they have never seen before.
So perhaps that's the long-term risk that, you know, many people are thinking about when they
think about Microsoft.
So the less important word becomes, because we use it much less, the more likely it is that a tool
will take over that just works much better with AI than Word, because it's AI first instead of
assuming a human user as, you know, the main starting point.
Just to move on to the next app in Microsoft's productivity suite, PowerPoint seems like
it's been similarly vulnerable to disruption. And like the pace and quality at which AI can
generate a complete slide deck has improved enormously just in like the last like four
months, it feels like. I'll be the first to admit that Claude has helped me build a number
of PowerPoints at this point. I mean, I'll provide it with the information. I'll give it kind of
a narrative structure, but then it does all the formatting and presentation work, you know,
much better than I ever could. And honestly, like, maybe a hundred times faster than it would
take me to do it. It is incredibly helpful. Although I got to say, just in the last couple of weeks,
I got highly allergic to presentations that look like AI immediately, especially Claude,
because that's what everyone is using nowadays.
So I think it's completely okay to feed it the data and then let it create an outline.
But when I see that someone just uses the presentation that came straight out of Claude or Chachipidi,
I kind of immediately discount the value of the presentation.
I know that's not the smartest thing to do.
It can still be your own data, your own research.
I don't know.
It just kind of gives me the ick if I see that.
Yeah.
I mean, PowerPoint's core value proposition has always been.
to lower the barrier to creating visually coherent presentations.
And that basically is what AI has now essentially collapsed.
So that barrier is now, before was it like 20% is now at zero.
It's just there is no barrier anymore.
You just give a hint or a prompt to Claude and he will do whatever you want.
And again, it feels so much easier to just ask Claude compared to co-pilot in PowerPoint that
it's just ridiculous.
You would feel that co-pilot should know word, should know PowerPoint and all those two,
it's better.
but if you compare to these generalist LLMs, they just tend to do a much better job.
So a year or two ago, you could have still argued that AI is quite good at creating a first draft,
but it has problems improving the presentation when you have things to adjust afterward,
for example, with how the presentation looks.
And that's a problem that's bigger than you would first imagine because many companies have
these individualized templates.
So if AI can't use them properly, you really just can't use the presentation at all.
Now, that's no longer the case either.
I mean, if I want Claude to come up with a template for me to use, then I just upload some
presentations that I have done before and tell Claude pretty much do exactly what these
presentations have done and use this data. And the results are just pretty good.
None of that sounds very positive for Microsoft, right? I mean, is there anything that should
make us bullish on the future of these office products? This is a $70 billion profit pool,
after all.
So if we're not feeling bullish about this,
really the whole thesis feels impaired.
I should emphasize that what we have discussed by now
is basically the bare case.
I mean, the unsettling part about that is
that at least to me it seems kind of realistic
and to some extent it is currently playing out.
Nevertheless, though, Microsoft Office is still the dominant player
and even all the LLMs use it should generate the results.
So I think we don't have to say
that Microsoft has no chance of getting back here.
And the best thesis here could also quickly turn into a bull thesis if Microsoft were able to turn
copilot into an actual value ad, which might only be a matter of time and, I don't know,
organizing within the companies that use it. If that's the case, the runway itself is still huge.
Only 3.3% of Microsoft's existing customers have paid subscriptions for co-pilot. And if there's one
thing that Microsoft Excel said, it is bundling things together and just increasing the conversion
of their products. And also generally, and that's something I learned recently, LLMs are about
equally good. So some are better at specific things than others, but it mostly balances out.
So the reason for Claude's sudden success, for example, has not only been its new model
and how much better it is than, for example, chatypd, but mainly its ability to use user contacts
in co-work or through its agents. And that seems to be co-pilot's struggle, although this should
have been its advantage. So it's difficult to access all the necessary data because most companies,
without even knowing it, have highly unsorted files. So basically files that meant to be confidential
are technically accessible to people who shouldn't see them because nobody clean up the settings
when, I don't know, project ended three years ago. So this existed for years pretty much with no consequence
because most employees don't hunt through SharePoint folders. They're not supposed to because they want to
find access to files that they shouldn't have access to. When in turn, though, you turn on co-pilot,
and it starts reasoning. Of course, everything that your account has technical access to,
that file mass quickly turns into a problem. And I've read about several enterprises that basically
ran early pilots on co-pilot and kind of figured out that there was information surfacing that
shouldn't have been surfacing and that employees have access to files that they shouldn't
have access to. And that's obviously a huge problem if the main argument for using co-pilot is that
it only has access to the files and to your corporate identity that you want to give it to,
right?
So maybe one last thing I should mention about Copilot is that you have access to all kinds
of models by now through Copilot.
So you can also use Claude and you can also use all the other favorite LLMs that you
have.
And that's obviously a good way to make sure that people still access them through Microsoft
and use Microsoft tools when they do.
So there's certainly a future where I would say pretty much nothing changes and
everyone stays subscribed to Microsoft Office.
Only the only difference is fewer human hours in Word, Excel, or PowerPoint.
And also, if you bundle all the products together, you can also justify price increases,
even if the office tools are used less than in the years before that.
So to summarize, the major problem for Microsoft right now is that this is probably the first time
in many, many years that you have even been able to come up with what is a plausible bear case
against the office segment. And that just has not been the case for a long time. And if you're a
company that traded at 40 times earnings, then the market is expecting really no signs of any
potential risks. It's just not baked into the price of that kind of valuation. Otherwise,
if uncertainty like this pops up, your stock is going to get dramatically re-rated. And, well,
that is a pretty quick summary of exactly what has happened to Microsoft stock in the
last six months.
I would say that's accurate.
I think we've seen the same thing when we had our portfolio review episode and we talked
about FICO, for example.
If companies traded these premium multiples, you just can't have anything happened that
just looks like a bare case.
To your point, though, I have just seen recently that you can now directly integrate
Claude inside of Word, inside of Excel, and also inside of PowerPoint.
And so at first, I think that does seem a bit odd because it is basically replacing exactly
what co-pilot is supposed to be there for, right?
It's almost like they're acknowledging that their own model isn't good enough, maybe,
or maybe it's just part of a more model agnostic approach to maybe put it more nicely.
Yeah, I've seen that too.
I think it's still embedded, but I think this will ship pretty soon.
And I think it's not easy to say how this will turn out.
I mean, on one hand, this is obviously competing directly with co-pilot.
But on the other hand, it at least ensures that people are still,
using the Microsoft tools like Word, like Excel, like PowerPoint.
So I think it kind of makes sense.
And also to some extent, you still benefit because Cloud, for example, goes at least to
some extent through Azure.
So Microsoft is monetizing that through the Cloud business.
That's a good point.
And perhaps that's a good time to leave Office behind us and talk more about Azure and
Microsoft's cloud capabilities generally, where I think we have more leeway to be bullish.
responsibly, right? So to understand this segment properly, we might first want to discuss the
three layers of cloud computing and where each major provider competes. Cloud has talked about a lot.
It's one of those buzzwords you always hear, but understanding what that actually means is
really not very straightforward. So at the bottom layer is infrastructure as a service, or you'll
see this abbreviated as the acronym IAAAS. And so this is raw compute.
storage, and networking rented by the hour or the second.
And you essentially get a virtual machine or container,
and then you're responsible for everything that runs on it.
And then AWS, Amazon Web Services,
pioneered this model in 2006 and continues to lead
with roughly 30% of the global cloud infrastructure market share.
Azure is at about 20 to 22%.
And then Google Cloud is at about 13%.
And so the three of them control,
more than 60% of a global market that crossed $100 billion in a single quarter in Q4 of last year,
growing at a rate of roughly nearly 30% year over year.
It's pretty astonishing to me just how stable the market share has been between these three players.
But a lot of them had fantastic growth rates.
Over the last few years, they didn't really gain share from one another.
So it's a bit odd because technically this is a business or a segment where there really isn't
a huge mode naturally to that business. So the compute you offer is more or less commoditized.
At the same time, though, it is very capital intensive to build the data standards, as we all
know by now when just looking at their CAPEX investments. And then when the market is dominated
by the likes of Amazon, Google, and Microsoft, you can kind of imagine how much capital you would
need to play in their league. So although it's technically difficult to differentiate your product,
they're just high enough barriers to entry for this to be a profitable oligopoly. And they are also
huge switching costs over time, which is why customers usually don't switch from, let's say,
AWS to Azure or Google Cloud and also the other way around. So it basically comes from this
factor that the more moty part of the cloud business is the second layer, which is called Platform
as a Service or PAAS. Unfortunately, all those acronyms are not sounding as good as SaaS when you just
spell them out. But this is basically where developers get pre-built services so we're talking.
databases, machine learning platforms, especially for Google's cloud, and some developer tools.
And this is where Azure has a structural advantage since Microsoft owns GitHub, which is the dominant
global code repository, everybody who codes will likely know GitHub, and also Visual Studio,
which is the most widely used development environment in the world.
So if you want to build your application on GitHub using Virtual Studio and once you deploy it,
it's pretty much impossible not to use Azure as your cloud service.
So Azure's competitive advantage is about having captured the developer relationship,
which is where a lot of these cloud decisions are being made.
And so that helps with onboarding new clients, especially at the enterprise level.
Is that the right way to be thinking about it?
Exactly. And it kind of goes back to this competitive advantage of just bundling everything,
right? If your ecosystem is so huge that everything is interconnected, and we haven't yet mentioned
this term of a flywheel today, but you can really talk about it,
where everything is going hand in hand with each other and basically one plus one equals three,
right? And this is how Microsoft operates. And there's also the third layer of the cloud
business above platform as the services, which is the actual software applications that
business users interact with. And that's what we all know, even as consumers. So we are talking Microsoft
365. We're talking teams. We're talking dynamics. And Microsoft really is the only major
hyper-scaler, simultaneously competitive at all three layers with an enormous install base at the top.
So AWS, for example, has virtually no enterprise software presence, and Google Workspace
competes at the application layer, but as we've discussed in pretty much 30 minutes, doesn't have
Microsoft's death or enterprise penetration.
So that has been a huge tailwind for Microsoft's cloud, and it's in part why they could have
this second position in this incredibly profitable market.
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bare case, but in my defense, Microsoft CEO, Satin Adela, is the one who's really bringing it up
and beating me to it. And so he talked about what happens to the platform layer, specific
when AI agents can just bypass it and what the implications of that are.
So what are your thoughts on that and what that means for the future of Microsoft's business?
Sachi Anadella is not holding back on the massive changes that might come for Microsoft.
And I mean, that's also why he doubled down so massively on co-pilot.
And he basically didn't want to get disrupted.
He wants to be the first mover.
He does not want to be the victim of the innovator's dilemma.
generally, this is what you want to see from a CEO, but it's the fact that the execution part
has really been lacking.
So the comparison might be harsh, but it even somewhat reminds me of what Mark Zuckerberg did
with the Metaverse.
So he basically rebranded the entire company and invested hundreds of billions, and it all ended
up failing miserably.
And Microsoft now has almost 80.
It's 80 different products with the name Copilot in it.
So their new laptops even have their own co-pilot keys.
and yet it is still such a big disappointment up until now.
So coming to your question, and this is kind of an introduction to that,
why might platform as a service be getting disrupted?
So the reason the platform layer has been so valuable and so sticky is that it basically
solves a complexity problem for software developers.
So if you want to build an application that needs user logins, for example,
you don't have to build your own password database, your own multifactor authentication system,
or your own single sign-on infrastructure from scratch.
And it all sounds pretty complex when I say it out loud.
But it's just that Microsoft really takes a lot of the things
that you would otherwise have to do on the backend and simplifies it.
So instead of building all these password databases,
you just call Microsoft Entra ID,
which is this identity management service at the platform layer.
And that service takes care of everything that you need.
And the same exists for database management, message queuing, and also analytics.
So the platform layer is a collection of these pre-built tools that developers can use.
And the reason that creates stickiness is that once you build your application on top of
Android ID or Azure SQL or even Azure Machine Learning, those services are basically integrated
into your code.
So the problem comes from what Nadela has described as being CRUD plus business logic.
And CRUD stands for create, read, update, delete, plus.
That's all set of rules.
It sounds pretty complex, but this is what most software basically is,
and an AI agent can now generate its own logic,
and that pretty much changes how everything works.
So it does not need all these abstraction layers that we just talked about.
It can go directly to the underlying database, get whatever it needs,
apply its own logic, and then return the answer.
So say someone wants to know the total accounts payable,
owe to vendors in a specific region.
Before AI, you as a user would open software, which calls platform services, which then access
the database, which then runs calculations, which then returns a result through the software
interface.
So there are just a lot of layers involved, and you as a normal employee wouldn't know that,
but that's the case on the back end.
An AI agent, though, just goes directly to the database, finds the data, does all the reasoning,
and then gives you the answer.
So it makes it just significantly easier, and you don't need all these plans.
platform layers because you, as an employee, you just don't go through them anymore.
And so that's why Microsoft is trying to turn Azure into a platform for AI agents themselves
through Copilot Studio and this agent framework. And essentially, it's a race to replace
the old platform layer with a new one before the old one disappears. And you have this
like melting ice cube dynamic. That's the bad you're taking. I mean, the question is whether
they can execute that transition, what it basically is.
faster than the erosion happens, and that is not guaranteed, right?
Which basically means there's some sort of uncertainty, and as we all know, markets don't like
uncertainty.
And there is one more dimension to this that I think is worth talking about, even if Microsoft
successfully deploys AI agents at scale.
The question then is who actually acquires the economics of those agents?
That remains up for debate.
That's a big question, and I think it really depends on what,
of the entire process you still control.
I try to keep it as simple as possible,
but I will still want to explain the layers.
And then also, please give us feedback in the comments
if you're an expert on this,
and you kind of have a theory on how it all works out.
So the first layer is the software where the agent's output lands.
So that would be Word, that would be Excel, that would be PowerPoint.
The second layer is the platform managing what the agent does,
what data access is, and how it's governed across the organization.
What does it mean?
Basically, what file can they access
and what file can they not access?
And then the third is the actual AI model
generating the output.
Okay, so that's Claude, that's chatypD,
those kind of things.
And then fourth is the compute infrastructure.
So that's the GPUs physically running the model
in a data center somewhere.
And Microsoft's aspiration is to own all four of those layers.
And then the question is,
how much of that stack they can actually control
and that mostly depends on whose agent is being deployed.
I think we need to dumb things down for me, Daniel,
because I like tangible examples.
So maybe just to go through some scenarios,
what happens if an enterprise uses Microsoft's software,
so Excel, Word, teams,
but then deploys a third-party agent.
So they're using Claude or ChatGBT.
So in that scenario,
Microsoft obviously keeps the office subscription,
because the output still lands
in either word, Excel or PowerPoint,
but the platform that manages
the agent's behavior goes to the model provider
or to no one if the enterprise builds it itself.
So for example, that's what Salesforce is aiming to do.
Then all the value would go to Salesforce.
The inference margin, which is just the profit margin
left after accounting for the operating costs
of running AI models, is running at about 60% right now.
And obviously, all of that would go to Anthropic,
open AI, or Google.
Microsoft sees none of that.
And then if the enterprise is running a GPT-based agent,
then OpenAI's models run on Azure,
so Microsoft captures the compute revenues on that.
But Anthropics primary cloud provider, for example, is AWS, not Azure.
So if an enterprise deploys a cloud agent,
most of the compute revenues would go to AWS.
And of course, the same is true with Google's Gemini models,
which run, obviously, on Google Cloud.
So in scenario one, Microsoft's compute capture depends entirely
on which third-party model the enterprise actually chooses.
So they get it for Open AI, but they only get it for them,
not if you use Claude, Mistral, or any other model.
Okay, so going to scenario two, let's say it's Microsoft software,
plus Microsoft's own agent being, let's say, co-pilot.
What does that look like?
That's the ideal outcome for Microsoft economically.
So they keep the office subscription again, they own the agent layer and the compute runs on Azure.
So the catch is that copilot today still runs primarily on OpenAI's models, meaning Microsoft
effectively still has to pay OpenAI a cut on every single copilot response generated.
So even in scenario two, they're not capturing the full value chain yet.
That's why Microsoft is investing so heavily in building its own AI models and also its own chips.
And the goal is basically to gradually shift co-pilot off Open AI's models and onto their own
so they can stop writing that check and really keep the full margin to themselves.
And then there's a third scenario in which Microsoft's orchestration layer wraps a third-party model
that then runs on Azure. Tell me about that situation.
Well, this is what Azure AI Foundry is positioning for.
and it might be Microsoft's most durable long-term position if they can pull it off.
So in this scenario, enterprises use Claude, Lama or, I don't know, even Mistral as the underlying model.
They access it through Microsoft's managed platform.
So you can imagine it as somewhat of an app store, taking cut on everything that runs through the platform,
even though the intelligence itself belongs to Anthropic matter or whoever has the LLM.
And the reason this is the most doable position is that it doesn't require Microsoft's own model to actually win that LLM race.
Sounds great in theory, but what's the risk that the model providers just bypassed Microsoft and go direct to enterprise customers, right?
If Anthropic is good enough, why does a large enterprise need Microsoft in the middle at all?
I mean, that is a possibility, but since Microsoft is already integrated in all of these.
large corporations on Earth and has so much more experience in both the governance and also
the regulatory world.
I do see why handling it through Microsoft is just a sort of safety layer for enterprises.
But even in the best version of Microsoft's platform strategy, the economics of the AI era
might look more like Spotify than like the office era.
So Spotify is arguably the best music distribution platform ever built.
So an easy-to-use product.
It's only for music, enormous scale and a dominant market position.
We just covered it here on the show a couple of weeks ago.
And still, the labels still capture roughly 70% of the revenue,
leaving Spotify with relatively thin margins compared to most other platform companies.
And Microsoft's software era was pretty much the opposite.
They were the creator, they owned the content, the margins were extraordinary.
And the AI era could shift Microsoft toward the distribution side of the latter.
And that doesn't mean it's a bad business. So Spotify at scale is still a large, important,
profitable business. But it is a different margin profile. And I think it justifies a different
multiple. And I think that is generally part of why the market is repricing Microsoft right now.
And actually, we just spend a couple of minutes also figuring out in our heads how exactly
it works that you have all these circular agreements where basically you have partnerships with
open AI or an Amazon's case with Claude. And then all of this.
compute is to some extent business for you and it's part of the growth numbers of the cloud
business. And at the same time, a lot of it is actually paid by vouchers, for example, in this
case. So it's not actually money that you receive. Most of the money, for example, for co-pilot,
still comes from the subscription service. So then you can open up the entire argument of who is actually
benefiting the most. And I think we'll still talk about it. But if you think about that and
then the relationship between Microsoft and Open AI, it seems more and more that Open AI is the
main beneficiary here. Not really paying for the compute, at least not with real money, only to some
extent starting in the last couple of years. It all makes it so incredibly difficult to understand
who exactly will make money, where the margin will be in five years. And it just increasingly
feels like this just goes in here to a hard pile. You took the words right out of my mouth.
But we still got to push through and understand the rest of the business and think about
the valuation before we make any decisions about the too hard pile.
I guess the question for investors isn't really, does Microsoft make money from AI agents?
Because they almost certainly do to an extent on all three scenarios.
It's more about how much of the value chain they'll own and what that will mean for the
margin structure of the business over the next 10 years.
The famous example of this that people like to throw around is the airlines.
Think about them as creating this massive utility worldwide, right?
A hundred years ago, I could not just get on a plane in D.C. and meet Daniel and Frankfurt.
It was just, it did not exist.
In the meantime, these companies have created a way for people to be able to travel anywhere
at honestly pretty reasonable prices when you think about what is actually happening
to take you from one point to another point on the other side of the globe.
and yet airlines are historically very, very unprofitable businesses that have, you know, Buffett
has famously said that in aggregate, airline stocks have destroyed more shareholder value than they've
created. So we were talking about capturing the value. You know, it's one thing to make a great
LLM and to be, you know, involved in this AI race, but then can you actually capture that value?
And with airlines, they have not captured that value.
Almost all of that surplus value has gone to consumers.
We all benefit greatly from the existence of airlines, and airlines have really not been able
to profit from that.
So that's a little tangent, but I do think it's a helpful lens to think about what it
means when we say capturing value.
I think it's important to understand that because we all are prone to this residency bias
of thinking that the big tech companies, mostly are the companies that end up
with most of the value for whatever product comes out.
But I do feel that to some extent,
and it's only gut feeling because understanding this all entirely is pretty difficult.
But when I researched Microsoft,
it felt more and more like perhaps this paradigm comes to an end,
at least for the type of business model that Microsoft has.
And this is not a prediction.
It's just that it's incredibly difficult to model or kind of understand,
and we just don't know yet which scenario is the most likely to play out.
And if enterprises broadly adopt copilot,
Microsoft owns the stack and compounds at perhaps software era economics on a much bigger scale or, you know, dominating a much bigger market.
But if enterprises use a third-party model, especially if Claude stays on AWS and that becomes, you know, the biggest player in the field, that would be a huge hit to Microsoft.
And, you know, perhaps you're kind of laying there with this format landlord status that's been systematically excluded from the high-marginal layer on the AI value chain.
And again, the answer is almost certainly somewhere in between those two extremes, but somewhere
in between can still mean a lot of different things for a stock that has historically been trading
between 30 to 40 times earnings.
All right.
Well, that's enough on that.
Let's talk more about this OpenAI partnership.
From the outside, it looks like this could have and perhaps should have huge implications
from Microsoft.
Most investors thought that it would, with Microsoft being able to use chat GBT model.
for co-pilot and how that would have been a major edge.
And just 18 months later, Open AI has gone from being really the anointed champion of
AI that seemingly deserves to be a trillion-dollar company to now seeming like in many ways
it's behind the competition.
And we may look back and determine that Open AI made the fatal choice of getting bogged
down with consumer products while the real money was to be made in B2B AI products, which
which is exactly what Anthropic has prioritized.
And yeah, I don't know.
If you ask me honestly, that may end up being one of the biggest oversights in 21st century
business history.
I mean, there will be case studies on it in colleges, you know, 10, 15, 20 years from now
if things keep moving in this direction.
So why has Microsoft not benefited more from its relationship with Open AI and leveraged that
tech to make superior B2B products itself?
because now it looks like they both have massively dropped the ball.
Microsoft made its first investment in OpenAI in 2019.
Back then, it was a billion dollars at a time when most of the world hadn't even heard
of a company or even just AI.
And they followed with additional investments in 2021 and then in early 2023,
committing $13 billion more in a deal, giving them roughly 49% of economic interest
and an exclusive cloud partnership that we just mentioned under which Open Air
I's workloads, run on Azure. But again, a lot of that money are actually these redeemable
vouchers. And it actually didn't go from Microsoft in terms of actual cash to Open AI. And as you said,
Open AI is no longer seen as the best model out there. And it might have missed the best opportunity
to play its AI elite. And of course, that makes people ask whether Open AI will even be able
to come up with all the money that it promised companies that they make business with, right?
I mean, for Microsoft, if you just pay them with vouchers, that's totally fine.
But there's so many other companies that they have basically promised hundreds of billions of dollars.
And you kind of ask yourself, how are they even supposed to make that money?
About 45% of Microsoft's $625 billion backlog is tied to these open-air relationships.
And those vouchers are not enough to cover that.
Again, they already start also paying real cash to Microsoft.
And Open-AI is far from being profitable.
It's burning through cash so fast that it really needs these continuously,
large funding rounds. So I don't know, its ability to fulfill a quarter trillion dollar commitment
to Azure alone. It kind of depends on just continuing to grow revenue fast enough to then
generate the cash to pay those Azure bills. A quarter trillion, Daniel, come on. That's so much money.
And then just recently, Cloud actually announced a revenue run rate of over $30 billion. That was
very much in the news, topping Open AI's run rate. So we already see,
competition overtaking Open AI. I mean, that has already happened. And that does not help with
their additional funding needs. And another negative from Microsoft came when OpenAI announced
something called the Frontier deal with Amazon. So maybe you can tell us more about that.
That's the other part of the Open AI relationship that is just a bit odd. So OpenAI launched a new
enterprise AI agent platform called Frontier and signed a $50 billion exclusive cloud deal to run it on
AWS instead of Azure, arguing that this new product pretty much falls outside of the scope
of the existing exclusivity agreement with Microsoft.
So despite the ownership's sake of Microsoft, it kind of seems relatively easy for OpenAI,
at least if this holds up, to just create new partnerships that basically bypass Microsoft.
And if that's the case, you kind of have to ask yourself with every new Open AI product,
will this be channeled through some competing cloud provider rather than exclusively to
Microsoft and its cloud. And then there's also the problem with Open AI's conversion from this
nonprofit organization, which they currently still are, to a for-profit company. And there you have
all this uncertainty about whether Microsoft's 49% stake or economic interest actually fully converts
into a comparable stake in this new for-profit entity should they get there.
The relationship has started to resemble those early partnerships in the smartphone era,
where you'd have the platform providers, Apple and Google,
they initially needed carriers like AT&T or Verizon for distribution and funding.
And then once they had enough scale, you saw that power dynamic just completely reverse.
And so Open AI started as a dependent.
And well, look, now it's valued at almost an $800 billion valuation
and is increasingly able to act in its own interest, you know, with its own autonomy.
It feels like the Open Air Partnership kind of resembles
pretty well how the power dynamic generally has shifted. So in the last 20 or so years,
big tech companies just bought whatever company they wanted and either they integrated them into the
ecosystem or they just killed it off to basically just avoid competition. And no matter what they did,
they certainly decided how things turned out. With Open AI, I think it feels like there has been,
for the first time in a long, long time, a company that grew so fast and to an extent that
no one could have seen coming that they grew too big to be controlled even by a company.
companies like Microsoft or Amazon.
And instead by now, it kind of looks like Microsoft lost control over them.
And when they realized that, they were starting investing even more heavily into the AI model
program, run by themselves, which is called MAI1, very simple name once again, developed toward
GPT4 class capabilities.
Of course, at lower inference costs running on their own Maya 200 chips.
And the model agnostic founding model was also launched because of this.
So Microsoft is doing a lot, but again, this also doesn't simplify the business generally.
All right. So we have one more thing I want to talk about before we get to the valuation, and then we can kind of wrap up today's discussion.
And that is to talk about CAPX, which is a conversation being had of many of the MAG 7 right now is hundreds of billions of dollars are being invested into AI and the impact it has on financial.
So what does that look like from Microsoft?
As you said, as every other hyperscaler, Microsoft obviously increases its
KAPX spend as well.
In just the six months, the first six months of the 26 fiscal year, KAPX is more than $70 billion
and the guidance is between 120 to almost $150 billion.
And for context, in fiscal 2023, KAPX was in total $28 billion.
So Microsoft now spends more on KAPX in a single quarter than in an entire year just
two and a half years ago. I think looking back or kind of zooming out, you kind of realize why the
market is so scared because of these investments and the KAPEx spend, because even for those
companies, it's so much money. And roughly two-thirds of the quarterly KAPX is going towards
short-lived assets, so primarily GPUs and CPUs. And they have, at least that's what's
currently saying, a useful life of about three to five years. And the depreciation charge runs
through the income statement. So we already know for a fact that there will be massive depreciation
appreciation charges coming in the next couple of years, certainly lowering margins.
So the ROI question then would be at what revenue generation level does all of this
spending pay for itself? And then on what timeline, right? Like, when will that happen?
I fear bring up too many numbers again. But if Microsoft is spending $140 billion a year on infrastructure,
and those assets need to at least earn their cost of capital, you would, let's say, want a minimum of
12 to 15% return. That would imply that you have about $17 to $20 billion of incremental annual
revenue generation from the infrastructure just to break even. Azure is already generating about
$75 plus billion in trailing revenue, growing at, again, close to 40%. And at that growth rate,
Azure adds roughly $28 billion in new annual revenue, which does clear the cost of capital bar.
if you believe the capacity being built now will actually be utilized at the current growth rates
for the foreseeable future. I think the concern is about the margin of safety here. Because if Azure
growth decelerates to, let's say, 25%, while KEPX still stays at these levels, then the returns
don't look that good anymore. You know, 25%, we just talked about how potentially the current growth
numbers are inflated by these circular investments in Open AI. So it does open up a lot of questions to
investors. And since growth even came in slightly below expectations, again, not 40%, only 39%,
that's one of the market's fears right now. And although Microsoft's CFO has said in the latest
earning score that demand for Azure is certainly there and growth could have been a couple
percentage points higher, if Microsoft wouldn't have decided to allocate compute capacity to other
parts of their own businesses first. To quote her, she said, the first thing we're doing is
solving the increased usage in sales and the accelerating pace of M365 co-pilot as well as
GitHub co-pilot, our first-party apps. Then we make sure we're investing in the long-term nature
of R&D and product innovation. And much of the acceleration that I think you've seen from us
in products over the past is coming because we're allocating GPUs and capacity to many
of the talented AI people we've been hiring over the past years. And just continuing with her
quote here. There's one more paragraph. She says, then you end up with the remainder going towards
serving the Azure capacity that continues to grow in terms of demand. And a way to think about that is,
if I had taken the GPUs that just came online in Q1 and Q2 in terms of GPUs and allocated them
all to Azure, the KPI would have been over 40. And I think the most important thing to realize
is that this is about investing in all of the layers of the stack that benefit customers.
But this quote alone, you might realize that if you will listen to an entire earnings call,
how often they would say the word co-pilot and maybe also how complex the business is
and how often they talk about the GPUs, the CPUs, how they changes the economics.
And it's all pretty difficult to understand.
I think if people tell you that they fully understand what's going on at these companies right now,
they're kind of lying.
I think it's just incredibly difficult to follow everything that's happening.
And beyond what the CFO just said, all CEOs of the big tech company is saying the same thing.
they would rather overshoot and invest too much than underinvest and lose their competitive position.
And if Microsoft underinvest and enterprise AI demand is even greater than projected right now,
they end up behind on capacity at exactly at the wrong moment in time.
So losing customers, at least potentially to AWS and also to Google Cloud,
who just made the bad earlier.
So to some extent, I feel there's peer pressure.
We just have to have these investments just to not potentially lose market share to direct rivals.
And I think I do agree with that strategy.
If we are at such a big changing point, you would risk losing basically your entire
business or at least your position by underinvesting.
Well, overinvestments themselves would kind of only mean a couple percentages less in returns.
I mean, we've seen that again with Marcus Zuckerberg's Metaverse.
That was a $100 billion flop.
I mean, literally no returns at all.
And still, it didn't really hurt matter in the long run.
So I think the risk of losing your position is much, much larger than the potential
of underinvesting right now.
And the Metaverse was a complete moonshot,
whereas we already have seen what AI can do
and how it can impact business models and profitability.
And after spending a lot of this episode
on the challenges that Microsoft is facing,
how about you give us just a refresher on the bullcase
because I think we're already forgetting
why we were initially bullish on the business.
Just a brief run.
I mean, we already talked about the three different scenarios
that could come for Microsoft.
And let's be honest,
It's hard to imagine that Microsoft will not play a vital role in software or AI in the future.
So the company is still positioned to potentially succeed in all parts of it, the entire value chain.
So offering the software tools, running the cloud and the compute, and having a competing model,
or at least offer all major ones through their co-pilot product.
A second bull argument pretty much writes itself, if you just take a look at the numbers.
I mean, Microsoft is still generating approximately $350 billion in annualize,
and to a large extent, recurring revenue, growing at 17% per year.
And the operating margin over the entire business is 45%, which is just insane at this scale.
Even free cash flow conversion is still looking good, although it has gone down from about 80% historically
to about 50% today, just mainly due to the KAPX investments.
And the company is also returning cash to shareholders.
It's about $40 billion in fiscal 2025, mostly through dividends and buybacks.
So that's more than any other company in the S&P 500 in absolute.
with dollar terms, still, unfortunately, just due to the size of the company, you have a low dividend
yield and also a low buyback yield.
So they have about $90 billion in cash as well, obviously a financially stable company.
That's not surprising to anyone who listens to this podcast.
So yeah, if you just summarize, this is a company that can fund an $80 billion capital spending
program, return $42 billion to shareholders, and then still show a huge cash pile in the bank.
And if we want to keep being bullish, there's that backlog number that we should revisit
And so just even setting aside the open AI portion, $344 billion is committed in non-open
AI revenue growing 28%.
So that does not look like a dying company.
I want a Fortune 500 company signs, let's say a three-year Azure commitment, they're essentially
making a statement that, hey, we are all in on Microsoft's AI infrastructure, right?
So it's not very likely, at least to me, that they plan on leaving the Microsoft ecosystem
many times soon. Another bull argument is also that, you know, they have this custom silicon
story, pretty much similar to what AWS or Amazon is also doing. So the so-called Maya 200,
we already talked about them, are deployed at scale in Microsoft's own data centers. And early
benchmarks, at least the one that Microsoft itself is putting out, suggests that it delivers
competitive inference performance at meaningfully lower cost per token than equivalent Nvidia GPU
configurations. Let's say Microsoft can shift even 20 to 30% of its AI inference workloads
from Nvidia GPUs, which we all know are incredibly expensive to their own chips over the next,
let's say, two to three years. I think that alone would mean margin improvements that would be
very significant for the overall company. Again, Amazon is doing the same and it seems like it's
working out pretty well. Finally, before we actually go to the valuation, you also have GitHub,
which shouldn't be underestimated. It's 100 million registered developers. So GitHub,
pilot has, I think, the clearest demonstrated ROI of any AI tool in this category, especially
for Microsoft, because not only does generate revenue for you right now, it's also developers
writing code 20 to 30 times faster in ways that show up directly in the shipping times for future
products. So there's a lot of debate about how much more efficient AI is actually making
people. In terms of writing code, it's actually a thing that's, you know, is the real deal.
And this also matters because developers often make the cloud.
infrastructure decisions at these big enterprises.
So you know, you benefit from it in many ways.
So when a developer's entire workflow is on GitHub and Visual Studio, I think the path
of least resistance and we kind of mentioned it multiple times today is also deploying
in Azure.
$7.5 billion for the world's most dominant coding platform, which is also now the world's
most adopted AI coding tool and then also the primary channel through which Microsoft
acquires developers who make cloud decisions.
I mean, in retrospect,
that just looks like maybe one of the best technology acquisitions of the last decade.
It's one of the positive examples of Microsoft's acquisitions.
And it's why I do give such an adela capital allocation instinct,
significant credit,
even while asking some hard questions about the execution in recent years,
just overall.
I think the perpetual license to a subscription bet was correct,
which obviously has been a long time ago,
but still to some extent,
we gave Adobe CEO credit for that,
not only because it happened,
but also because it kind of shows the skill
of adapting your business model
to changes in the future,
which is currently happening.
Then the Azure bet was obviously also correct.
And then you have GitHub and you also have Open AI,
which doesn't sound like the best deal anymore
if we look at it today.
But honestly, three years ago,
AI was completely new, nobody knew about it.
So that is a win.
All right.
Well, we've teased it enough.
Let's get to the valuation.
Is Microsoft our Google of 2026, or is it not as attractive as it might look at first
glance?
I got to say it's certainly way more complex, which is probably not a good thing.
But in terms of evaluation, I've divided my model into a base and a bare case.
The base case assumes Microsoft kind of successfully navigates the AI transition on roughly
the terms that management has described.
So revenue compounds at about 17% annually.
through the next five years, which would be fiscal year 2030.
And that might sound aggressive.
But if you consider that Azure is still growing in the high 20s to low 30s
and becoming a bigger part of the pie and also co-pilot adoption,
just improving from, let's say, 3.3% toward 10 to 12%.
I mean, for that, obviously, you wouldn't need it to be a much better product.
But on the install base that Microsoft has,
and I believe they will find a way to bundle that.
It's not like it's a heroic assumption at all.
we still talk about five years out.
So the key assumption in this model is on the margin side
and basically means that free cash flow margins do recover modestly
from today's depressed levels because of all the cabex.
So that means we go to somewhere in the mid-30s in five years' time.
And that basically means that the cab-ax buildout kind of peaks
and that depreciation at that point stabilizes.
And on that basis, I think normalized free cash flow per share
could be around $30.
And if you then say, hey, well, this is a company,
still one of the best in the world, probably deserves a 25 times exit multiple.
Then I would say that you could get a fair value today of around $500 per share.
The company is complex.
We don't fully understand it in all parts that it has ready for us.
So I would say a 20% margin of safety for all the stuff that we don't know is probably fair.
And then you would end up at about $410, which is pretty much exactly where the stock is trading today.
And you could say there's a bias between making the model and suddenly it's exactly the price it is today.
But when I billed it, the price of Microsoft was originally still $375.75.
At that point, the return that you could have expected was about 16%.
At today's prices, it's a bit closer to 14%.
Well, I feel like we've already done it, but shall we discuss the bare case in your valuation?
Well, we've certainly discussed the bare case in all of its qualitative factors.
So in terms of numbers, I expect the top line growth to slow down slightly to about 13 to 14%.
So it's not that I expect the company to just not grow anymore.
But the bearcase is mostly about what happens to the margin structure if the commoditization
thesis that we discuss, especially with AI, is actually playing out.
So in detail, I do think that, you know, we could see margins compressed to about 35%.
I'm talking about the operating margins here in five years time.
And that mostly means, you know, you see a shift from this high margin software company
toward a more capital-intensive infrastructure provider.
and I think that margin trajectory
we reflect pretty much a world
where the AI value chain economics
that we've discussed at a length today
favor the model providers
where Microsoft's platform as a server stickiness
canvroats as AI agents
bypass that layer
and where the infrastructure build out
never fully earns its cost of capital.
If you would then assume that we have an exit multiple
maybe at about 20 times
which kind of makes sense
because you have a lower margin business
it's also not growing as fast,
then you would get to a fair value
that's significantly lower, somewhere in the 280s.
For as interesting as today's episode has been,
man, I've hardly ever been so confident about a company being in my too hard pile.
Thinking about, you know, good old fashioned value investing,
man, this just feels complicated.
And we talk a lot about using our consumer insights to shape how we invest.
And honestly, I do not use Microsoft at all somehow.
I'm like an anomaly.
I use Google's productivity suite personally in for work.
I'm not a coder. I don't use GitHub. I don't use co-pilot. I'm very loyal to Claude and
Gemini. I have an iPad and not a Surface tablet. And actually, I was really kind of breaking my
brain for this. My only connection to Microsoft that I can like really directly think of is my
Xbox that I've had since college. So a lot of this was all very new to me, which makes it
difficult to kind of digest everything. But then when you layer in how their massive CapEx is going
to affect the income statement, while this huge profit pool in their productivity suite seems
quite ripe for disruption.
It is hard for me to get really excited about the company.
I'm sure it's great, but I'd probably be much more excited to just add more to some of the
businesses I already know, like Amazon, if I want more Mag7 exposure.
And then with Alphabet, too, we already have a significant amount of exposure to great cloud
businesses in our intrinsic value portfolio.
And that really seems to be the most compelling part of the Microsoft story anyways.
So it feels like taking on new risks, but not necessarily getting much more in return,
except for perhaps a better valuation, at least on paper compared to Alphabet.
And so, I don't know, maybe Microsoft will grow on me, but it's not so obviously a great
opportunity to me that I need to invest in it over many of the other companies we follow
for our intrinsic value portfolio.
I agree. I think I was a bit surprised, actually, by how many reasonable bare cases there are for Microsoft.
And we might get a bit of pushback here on this episode because I know there are a lot of people who love Microsoft.
But when I look at companies like Amazon, I just find it hard to find as many bear cases.
And I do believe that when we looked at Google about a year ago, there was certainly a lot of bad press.
And still, if you looked at the business model, it seemed easier to understand.
It kind of seemed easier to see how this is actually completely mispressed by the market.
of course, Amazon is a company that is trading at higher multiples than Microsoft is right now,
but Microsoft is also not the deep value play either. So it's not that you would buy it because of
its cheap valuation. So I do think that after looking into it and getting even more into
this AI field and what exactly the economics of the cloud computing are and these circular
investments with Open AI, I do feel like it's going on the too hard pile. And I feel like you
might learn more over time. You might have some feedback in the comments of people who understand
a way better, who think that they could explain it to us. If so, please do. But I do believe that
currently it is on the two-hard pile, put it on a watch list, but not in our portfolio. And with
that, I would say I close it for today with a quote by Satcha Nadella, of course, who else
than the CEO of Microsoft. And he said, our industry does not respect tradition. What it respects
is innovation. And while there's a bear case to make for Microsoft, I'm pretty confident Microsoft
will not go down because it missed out on innovating and kind of disrupting itself.
So the question is whether it will be able to do that without disrupting its most profitable
business before we're placing it with a better one.
I think only the future will tell if that's the case.
And with that, see you all in the next episode.
Thanks for listening to TIP.
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