Descriptions:
This episode of The AI Daily Brief uses Meta and Microsoft’s latest earnings reports as a window into the current state of AI bubble anxiety — and argues the two companies represent starkly different strategic postures on AI infrastructure investment. Bloomberg’s Caroline Hyde framed the contrast simply: “Meta wins, Microsoft loses” based on after-hours market reaction, despite both companies beating on earnings and revenue.
Meta delivered 24% year-over-year revenue growth, driven in part by AI-powered improvements to its recommendation and advertising systems. CEO Mark Zuckerberg outlined an ambitious vision for AI glasses, noting that Ray-Ban Meta smart glasses sales have tripled over the past year, and called 2025 a “rebuilding year” for Meta’s AI program ahead of new model launches. Despite massive capex increases that prompted analyst Michael Green to call the embedded risk “astonishing,” Meta shares rose 8% in after-hours trading.
Microsoft’s story was more complicated. Azure grew 38% year-over-year but showed a slight quarter-on-quarter deceleration, which investors punished despite the scale. The episode highlights a critical disclosure: OpenAI now accounts for 45% of Microsoft’s $625 billion cloud sales backlog following a new $250 billion commitment, prompting Jefferies analyst Brent Thill to raise questions about OpenAI’s ability to meet its financial obligations to Oracle, Microsoft, and other infrastructure providers. The host argues Microsoft’s 5% after-hours decline reflects not bubble fears but market frustration with the company’s cautious infrastructure build-out during a period of surging demand.
📺 Source: The AI Daily Brief: Artificial Intelligence News · Published February 01, 2026
🏷️ Format: News Analysis







