Friday, August 9, 2024

Antitrust Might be a Bigger Problem than GenAI

Perceptions and performance can change very quickly in the generative artificial intelligence business.


Consider the most-recent financial report from Alphabet, considered perhaps the most vulnerable of hyperscale app firms to new competition coming from generative AI rivals who see a chance to recast the search business. 


And the biggest danger to Alphabet arguably is regulatory, not AI impact. Antitrust action, a threat to all the hyperscalers, now already has emerged for Alphabet.  On August 3, 2024, a possible landmark ruling by U.S. District Judge Amit Mehta found Google guilty of violating antitrust laws by maintaining an illegal monopoly in the search engine market, as it pays partners such as Apple for default status on Apple devices. 


Though remedies are not yet clear, it is possible there is some future diminution of the market value of Google’s default app status, even if users can easily change default search providers at will. 


Separately, Meta’s open source approach to Llama also could have key market impact.


Venture capital firm Andreessen Horowitz suggests enterprises are quite open to open source generative AI. “We estimate the market share in 2023 was 80 percent to 90 percent closed source,” Andreessen Horowitz says. “However, 46 percent of survey respondents mentioned that they prefer or strongly prefer open source models going into 2024.”


Over time, “enterprises expect a significant shift of usage towards open source, with some expressly targeting a 50/50 split—up from the 80 percent closed/20 percent open split in 2023,” Andreessen Horowitz notes. 

Enterprises’ growing preference for open-source AI models

source: Andreessen Horowitz 


That noted, such impact is not yet seen. 


Total Alphabet revenue in the three months ended June 30, 2024 rose 13.6 percent year over year to $84.74 billion, outpacing the $84.19 billion expected. Earnings per share jumped 31 percent on an annual basis to $1.89, exceeding the $1.84 expected.


With the caveat that we are early in the transition, competition is not yet seen in the financial results.  Though investors were--and might still be--concerned about what generative AI might mean for Alphabet’s search revenue, the opposite appears to be the case, at least for now. 


“People who are looking for help with complex topics are engaging more and keep coming back for AI overviews,” Sundar Pichai, Alphabet CEO said, noting high engagement from younger users aged 18 to 24 when they use search with AI overviews.


The danger of some market share cannibalization is so far offset by continued growth of search revenues. So even if some new competitors hope to take share, the market itself continues to grow. And Google arguably continues to hold a lead in scale. 


Alphabet Threats

Alphabet Opportunities

Increased Competition: Alphabet faces competition from new generative AI search engines, such as OpenAI's, which pose a threat to its market dominance.

Enhanced Search Capabilities: Integrating generative AI into Google's search capabilities allows for better responses to complex queries and innovative search methods, attracting users, especially younger demographics.

Market Share Risk: The rise of AI-driven competitors could erode Alphabet's dominant market share in search.

Revenue Growth: Generative AI has contributed to better-than-expected search revenues, indicating potential for continued growth.

Technological Challenges: There is a risk of falling short in AI advancements, which could impact Alphabet's competitive edge.

User Engagement: AI features have led to high engagement levels, with users increasingly returning for AI-generated summaries.

Investor Concerns: Despite proactive measures, there are ongoing concerns about the impact of AI competition on Alphabet's stock performance.

Cost Management: Effective management of expenses and investments in generative AI can lead to improved operating margins and cost efficiencies.

Pressure on Innovation: The need to continuously innovate in AI to stay ahead of competitors adds pressure on Alphabet.

Strategic Investments: Alphabet has a chance to define the generative AI category


It will take some time for the appeals process to play out (years), and then the key issue of remedies has to be settled. In the meantime, it remains unclear whether GenAI will actually harm Google search to any serious degree. 


A similar antitrust ruling in the European Union in 2018 forced Google to allow users to choose a different search engine as their default when setting up a new Android phone, while allowing the company to charge other search engines for the right to be included as an alternative. So far, this ruling has had a negligible effect on Google’s market share in Europe, most would say. 


The 1998 antitrust ruling against Microsoft prohibited bundling of browsers with operating systems arguably has not impeded Microsoft’s growth, though some would say the ruling allowed Google to emerge as the leader in browsers. 


AT&T was broken up (seven new local access firms plus long-distance provider AT&T), but the firm has largely been reassembled. And in that case, as well as with IBM, one might plausibly argue that other platform changes (the internet; TCP/IP; the decomposition of services into layers; personal computing; cloud computing) were more responsible for fundamental changes than the antitrust actions. 


Firm

Antitrust Action Year

Business Model Change

Actual Damage to Firm

Microsoft

1998

Allowed competing browser software on Windows

Loss of browser market dominance, but questionable serious financial damage

AT&T

1982

Divided into smaller companies (Baby Bells)

Increased competition in telecom industry but AT&T reassembled

IBM

1969-1982

Unbundled software from hardware sales

Slowed growth, emergence of competitors (PCs, smartphones)

Google

2020-present

Potential changes in search and ad practices

Not clear, yet


Perhaps the point is that antitrust action is seldom welcome by the firms to which it is applied. But the long term impact is hard to discern. 


And though the impact of GenAI might also be significant for incumbents, it remains to be seen whether that impact is positive, neutral or negative. 


Thursday, August 8, 2024

How Big a Market for AI Data Center Interconnection?

Lumen Technologies has announced it will receive 10 percent of Corning’s total optical fiber production for a period of two years, to support additional capacity supporting “data center to data center” connections supporting artificial intelligence operations. 


The additional fiber is said to double Lumen route miles, but also support an order of magnitude expansion of “inside the data center” optical connections as well. Some might say the new move supports Lumen’s earlier move to emphasize its private connectivity fabric.


And while estimates vary, all observers would note that Lumen is a major provider of public optical networking services in the U.S. market. By some estimates, Lumen is the largest supplier. 



Optimists might say the new effort to create capacity connecting AI data centers is “new business.” Skeptics might say it is simply the evolution of the existing business. But Christopher Stansbury, CFO, says the new AI-related deals are “largely all incremental.” 


“This isn't cannibalization of legacy at all,” he notes. 


Research FirmAI "Data Center to Data Center" Interconnection Services (Capacity) ForecastOverall "Data Center to Data Center" Capacity Market ForecastGartner


The AI "data center to data center" interconnection services market is expected to grow from $4.2 billion in 2023 to $9.1 billion by 2027, a CAGR of 16.8 percent, according to analysts at Gartner.


Gartner also forecasts the overall "data center to data center" capacity market is forecast to grow from $48 billion in 2023 to $72 billion by 2027, a CAGR of 10.6 percent.


According to IDC, the AI-driven "data center to data center" interconnection services will account for 22 percent of the total "data center to data center" capacity market by 2025, up from 15 percent in 2023.


The global "data center to data center" capacity market is projected to reach $64 billion by 2025, growing at a CAGR of 12.7 percent from 2023, IDC also believes.


Forrester researchers believe the market for AI-enabled "data center to data center" interconnection services will grow at a CAGR of 19 percent from 2023 to 2027, reaching $8.5 billion by 2027.


Forrester also estimates the overall "data center to data center" capacity market will grow at a CAGR of 11 percent from 2023 to 2027, reaching $68 billion by 2027.


Markets and Markets predicts the AI "data center to data center" interconnection services market will grow from $4.6 billion in 2023 to $10.2 billion by 2027, at a CAGR of 17.3 percent .The global "data center to data center" capacity market is forecast to grow from $51 billion in 2023 to $78 billion by 2027, at a CAGR of 11.2 percent, the firm says. 


Either way, “data center to data center” connections are an important niche or segment of the capacity business, including sales to third party customers as well as captive capacity owned and operated by hyperscalers including Alphabet, Amazon and Meta, which consume much capacity to support their own operations. 


Though it is virtually impossible to know with great precision, most estimates of active traffic on global long-haul networks point to the importance of “data center to data center” connections as a percentage of total active connectivity. For example, broad consensus seems to exist that between 30 percent and perhaps as much as half of active capacity now is used to support connections between data centers and other data centers. 


By definition, that data center traffic is all enterprise or wholesale, while traffic between internet PoPs might be either retail or wholesale; consumer or enterprise. 


Category

Global Capacity

Data Center Interconnections

30-50%

Internet Points of Presence (PoPs)

30-40%

Enterprise Networks

10-15%

Other

5-10%


The contribution of AI data center interconnection to Lumen financial results remains to be seen. But it is an important segment of the connectivity business and among the largest segments.


Monday, August 5, 2024

AI Capex Apparently Not an Issue So Long as a Firm is Making Lots of Money

The last quarter’s financial reporting suggests financial analysts and investors can tolerate uncertain capital investments in artificial intelligence without qualms so long as the topline revenue and bottom line profits are there. 


Or at least that would seem to be the case, as Meta did not immediately suffer when it announced it was raising its AI capex, though Google was hammered. 


Amazon and Microsoft had mixed reports: Amazon reporting smaller-than-expected revenue growth and profits, Microsoft actually beating expectations for revenue and profit, but showing some weakness in cloud computing. 


Though all the firms’ stock prices were hit by a big downdraft in early August, Meta has held up best. 


Perhaps Meta’s reported ad revenue growth, along with its planned AI investments, shows one way to calm observers: keep making money while investing. That might be easier for some than others, as Amazon might face consumer spending headwinds. For Google, the issue seems more related to concerns about growing search competition, Microsoft could be dinged by a recession that slows enterprise information technology spending. 


In the near term, in other words, so-called “AI stocks” might be evaluated based primarily on how their core legacy businesses are situated, irrespective of any future benefit from AI operations and products, since such benefits will not be obvious for some time. 


And the revenue results might not match the market reaction. As was the case at Alphabet and Meta, Microsoft revenue was up 15 percent, year over year in the second quarter of 2024. Amazon revenue also was up, but less than financial analysts had expected. 

Except at Amazon, revenue growth was not the immediate issue. Instead, capex growth is the concern.

Al capex is up at Microsoft, but “roughly half of FY2024's total capital expense as well as half of fourth-quarter expense, it's really on land and build and finance leases, and those things really will be monetized over 15 years and beyond,” said Amy Hood, Microsoft CFO. 

Over at Alphabet, second-quarter 2024 revenues were up 14 percent (15 percent) in constant currency, year over year. But AI capex is expected to hit $50 billion in 2024. 


Market watchers seem to see danger for Alphabet’s search revenue stream as rival AI suppliers seek to cut into Google’s search dominance, beyond the issue of AI capex magnitude. 


 “The risk of under-investing is dramatically greater than the risk of over-investing for us here, even in scenarios where it turns out that we are over investing,” said Sundar Pichai, Alphabet CEO. 


It also is worth noting that, because of regulatory scrutiny, it no longer is possible for Alphabet to “acquire” positions in markets or capabilities. Instead, it has to grow them organically. 


The implications of Meta’s positioning on AI capex might be about as good as it gets: robust core revenue drivers able to support AI capex. Alphabet’s ad growth was not as good as Meta’s in the second quarter, and beyond that there are the concerns of search market share dangers. 


“While we expect the returns from Generative AI to come in over a longer period of time, we’re mapping these investments against the significant monetization opportunities that we expect to be unlocked,” Zuckerberg noted.


In the particular case of Meta, at least some analysts and observers will be heartened by the apparent recognition on Meta’s part that AI is the more-immediate opportunity, compared to augmented reality, for example. 


“A few years ago, I would have predicted that holographic AR would be possible before Smart AI, but now it looks like those technologies will actually be ready in the opposite order,” said Zuckerberg. 


Commenting on “the AI platform shift,” Similar to the cloud, this transition,  Satya Nadella, Microsoft Chairman and CEO, noted that AI is similar to the prior transition to cloud computing, involving  capital-intensive investments

In other words, investment has to be made. Public companies that continue to have strong revenue and profit growth will essentially get a pass. But other firms will face greater scrutiny.


Sunday, August 4, 2024

Hyperscaler AI Capex Disruption is Nothing Compared to Cable Operator FTTH Challenge

Technology discontinuities can be very disruptive of business models, in areas such as capital investment burdens, for example. For cloud data centers, we might ponder how accelerated spending on graphics processor units could affect more-routine updates of servers supporting traditional operations. 


Researchers at Omdia estimate that AI server capex will be 66 percent of total data center capex in 2024, for example. And cloud computing giants tend to increase capex spending substantially, year over year, in any case.  


Between 2018 and 2022, annual cloud computing hyperscaler capex has grown about 30 percent a year, according to researchers at Costar. Omdia thinks that rate will be exceeded in 2024. 


Of course, not all observers think the increases will be that high. Some think the increase could be closer to 10 percent, overall, with the caveat that some spending could be shifted from other areas of infrastructure to server purchases. 


Also, since the spring of 2024, most of the hyperscalers have announced increases above the level noted by Dgtl Infra at that time. 


source: DgtlInfra 


Still, most observers would tend to agree that hyperscale cloud computing capex will increase in 2024 between 15 percent and 35 percent. 


Estimate

Publication Date

Publishing Venue

Cloud Provider

Increase

Cloud Capex in a Time of Uncertainty

July 24, 2024

Gartner Research

All

15-20%

The Public Cloud Race: 2024 and Beyond

June 10, 2024

Synergy Research Group

Amazon Web Services (AWS)

22-25%

Capital Intensity in Hyperscale Data Centers: A 2024 Update

May 15, 2024

McKinsey & Company

Meta, Alphabet (Google Cloud)

30-35%

Cloud Wars: The Battle for Enterprise Spending

April 02, 2024

Barclays Research

Microsoft Azure

18-22%


The point is that capex as a percentage of revenue is growing.  


source: Futurion 


U.S. cable TV operators also face a discontinuity, namely a switch of platform from hybrid fiber coax to fiber-to-home networks, driven primarily by home broadband requirements. 


And cable operators are likely to find the cost of switching from the existing access platform to fiber-to-home to be as costly as telcos have faced, as it means switching from one type of platform to another (copper to fiber for telcos; hybrid fiber coax to FTTH for cable operators). 


For that reason, cable operators are likely to use any number of targeted upgrades whenever possible. The objective will be to delay a full “rip and replace” as long as possible. Near term, HFC upgrades will continue as long as possible, with incremental FTTH overlays in some cases. 


But a full transition away from HFC for most households will be quite disruptive, on the order of what telcos have faced moving from copper to fiber access. Where upgrading HFC has cost something on the order of $200 per location, an FTTH upgrade might cost between $1,200 and $2,500 per passing. 


That is an order of magnitude increase in capex. 


Upgrade Type

Estimate Name

Publication Date

Publishing Venue

Cost Estimate (per-passing)

Cable TV Operator

HFC Network Modernization with DOCSIS 4.0

January 2023

Light Reading

Less than $200

Cable TV Operator

Full Fiber Upgrade - Greenfield Deployment

August 2021

FierceTelecom

$1,200 - $1,800

Cable TV Operator

Full Fiber Upgrade - Brownfield Deployment (Existing Infrastructure)

August 2021

FierceTelecom

$1,800 - $2,500

Telco

Fiber-to-the-Premises (FTTP) Greenfield Deployment

May 2022

FTTH Today

$1,000 - $1,500

Telco

Fiber-to-the-Building (FTTB) Greenfield Deployment (Multi-dwelling units)

May 2022

FTTH Today

$800 - $1,200

Telco

FTTP Brownfield Deployment (Existing Infrastructure)

May 2022

FTTH Today

$1,200 - $1,800


 So the cable operator transition from HFC to FTTH will be much more disruptive than the cloud computing hyperscaler investment in AI capex. 


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