Microsoft (NASDAQ: MSFT), Amazon (NASDAQ: AMZN), and Alphabet (NASDAQ: GOOGL) continue to combine AI leadership with massive consumer reach to drive revenue growth and compound earnings.
The S&P 500 has historically averaged roughly 10% annual earnings growth, according to FactSet, and all three companies are projected to exceed that benchmark.
Microsoft shares have fallen 23% year to date as investors debate what agentic AI means for the future of enterprise software, with some fearing its tools could be replaced by custom-built alternatives.
That concern may overlook a critical structural advantage Microsoft holds through its deeply embedded enterprise relationships and proprietary data assets.
Microsoft Cloud revenue, which includes Office subscriptions and enterprise cloud services, jumped 29% to nearly $55 billion in the latest quarter, reinforcing its position as the default productivity platform.
Microsoft Copilot draws on Work IQ’s data pool of over 17 exabytes, which is growing 35% year over year and spans billions of emails, chats, Teams meetings, and documents.
Microsoft 365 Copilot now has over 20 million paid seats, and analysts still project long-term earnings growth of roughly 15% annually, with the stock trading around 22 times forward earnings.
Amazon Web Services revenue surged 28% year over year in the first quarter, the fastest pace in 15 quarters, underscoring the cloud leader’s sustained momentum in the AI spending cycle.
Amazon’s multiple revenue engines, spanning cloud, a $70 billion trailing-12-month advertising business, e-commerce, and logistics, converge into a durable competitive moat that few rivals can replicate.
Alphabet’s total revenue surged 22% year over year in the first quarter to nearly $110 billion, driven by strength across Search, YouTube, and its rapidly scaling Google Cloud segment.
Google Cloud segment revenue rose 63% year over year, reflecting a broader enterprise rush to deploy AI tools for custom applications and more intelligent data analysis in the cloud.
Alphabet recently announced an $80 billion equity offering to fund its AI compute build-out, including a $10 billion investment from Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway, signaling strong institutional confidence in its long-term trajectory.
The stock trades at a forward earnings multiple of 25, with analysts projecting 15% annualized earnings growth, placing it roughly in line with Microsoft and Amazon on growth and valuation metrics.
All three companies offer above-average earnings growth prospects at reasonable valuations, setting up a credible case for market-beating returns over the next several years.