A massive amount of money is being spent on developing, preparing for, buying, and implementing AI. What has it caused, and how does AI now look overall?
Before the articles
below came out “Is the AI bubble actually bursting?” (Patrick Kulp, Tech
Brew, August 8th).
Concerns here were that “a stock market rout and big questions about
spending continue to stoke worries,” that “some high-profile reports this
summer questioned AI’s money-making potential relative to its enormous cost,” that
“Microsoft, Alphabet, and Meta didn’t do much to soothe investors seeking
temperance in AI capital expenditures,” and that we have reason to expect “a
“major course correction” in AI hype as revenues fail to keep pace with
spending.”
Since then,
there have been strong and weak AI financial outcomes. On August 23rd, Courtney Vien told us, in CFO
Brew, “How Walmart’s seen ROI on gen AI.”
“During its last earnings call, the giant retailer reported 4.8% revenue
growth, bolstered by 21% growth in its e-commerce function,” which “Walmart
executives credited… to several factors… but one stood out: generative AI.” The technology had helped with “populating
and cleaning up” the company’s gargantuan “product catalog,” of which the new
version has also “given Walmart more insight into its customers.” AI has also been “driving its impulse sales”
through improved “cross-category search.”
Another such
success story was the subject of “Nvidia’s earnings beat Wall Street’s
estimates as AI momentum continues” (Eric Revell, Fox Business, August
28th). In its “second-quarter
earnings report,” earnings per share reached $0.68 instead of the projected
$0.64, and revenue came in at $30.04 billion instead of $28.70 billion. Although it started production of a new
AI-dedicated chip, the Blackwell, demand for the current Hopper version has
“remained strong.”
A major
consumer of Nvidia’s chips rates to buy many more, as “OpenAI Is Growing Fast
and Burning Through Piles of Money” (Mike Isaac and Erin Griffith, The New
York Times, September 27th).
Although that firm “has been telling investors that it is making
billions from its chatbot,” “it has not been quite so clear about how much it
is losing.” While “OpenAI’s monthly
revenue hit $300 million in August, it “expects to lose roughly $5 billion this
year after paying for costs related to running its services and other expenses
like employee salaries and office rent.”
It spends most, though, on “the computing power it gets through a
partnership with Microsoft, which is also OpenAI’s primary investor.” Even if company projections showing a much
brighter future will come to pass, OpenAI’s financial present is dark.
On industry
results, Matt Turner reported those from the previous week from five of the
largest companies in the November 3rd “Insider Today” in Business
Insider. Overall, he said they were
“beating estimates and committing billions to AI.” Alphabet’s Google-branded “cloud business
benefited from AI adoption, posting a 35% year-over-year increase in
revenues.” Amazon did the same, with AI-assisted
cloud revenues growing 19%. Apple’s loss
of Chinese revenue “left investors underwhelmed,” and it is uncertain if “new
Apple Intelligence features help juice sales.”
“Meta beat estimates, though user growth came in below expectations,”
and CEO Mark Zuckerberg “promised to keep spending on AI.” Microsoft also did better than they expected,
“but concerns around capacity constraints in AI” hurt investor reactions. Overall, AI seemed to be producing real money
for these firms, but related revenue growth has hardly been explosive.
A useful
summary, “How companies are spending on AI right now,” by Patrick Kulp, came
out on November 12th in Tech Brew. In an in-effect response to the first article
above, also written by Kulp, the piece started with “Despite some worry about a
possible AI bubble earlier in the year, businesses are continuing to spend on
generative technology – and investors are still eyeing it as a growth
area.” Another conclusion here was that
of “AI becoming an office staple” with 38% third-quarter-on-second-quarter
growth of “business spending on AI vendors.” Although “half of the top 10 fastest growing
enterprise software vendors on the platform were AI startups,” “OpenAI’s
ChatGPT still reigns supreme,” but companies buying that have been increasingly
likely to get other firms’ products as well.
Additionally, we have “AI still fueling VC growth,” as “three-quarters
of limited partners surveyed… said they plan to increase AI investments in the
next 12 months, with cybersecurity, predictive analytics, and data centers
garnering the most interest.” Note that
“autonomous vehicles and computer vision ranked last for sub-fields of AI
catching investor attention.” Yet, per
an Accenture report, there has been a “productivity flatline,” despite more AI
use, over the past year.
What does all
this reveal about artificial intelligence?
It is not vaporware. Demand for
it is real, in fact huge. For some
applications it is strongly objectively beneficial. But it still has problems, with, along with many
more mentioned in previous posts, profitability and productivity. We don’t know how comprehensive its
advantages will turn out to be. But it
is real, and it is progressing. From
there, we will just need to stay tuned.