Topline: Microsoft is now the most popular cloud services supplier and is steadily gaining market share against major competitors like Amazon, according to a new survey from Goldman Sachs about the current state of a trend that is reshaping the technology industry.
Crucial statistics: The cloud computing wars are just getting started, with plenty of potential market share to still go around: Around 23% of IT workloads are now on public clouds, and that number will reach 43% in three years, according to the Goldman analysts. The booming cloud services market, on the whole, is likely to balloon to a valuation of up to $1 trillion.
AWS reported $9 billion in revenue last quarter. Microsoft didn’t report specific quarterly revenue for Azure, but one analyst estimated that it was about $4.33 billion, according to CNBC.
Key background: With cloud software proving to be a booming new trend in the tech space, that will lead to even more competition between big players, such as for the $10 billion Pentagon JEDI contract earlier this year, where Microsoft won out on the deal over Amazon. With Azure’s popularity and growing momentum in the cloud services space, Wedbush analysts Daniel Ives and Strecker Backe predict that Microsoft and its CEO Satya Nadella will “win the next stage of the cloud war” against Bezos and Amazon in 2020.
What to watch for: Don’t write Google off as a competitor yet, the Wedbush analysts say. Google Cloud Platform will potentially make a “major strategic acquisition” of another public cloud vendor in its bid to catch Microsoft and Amazon.
Tangent: As Microsoft’s cloud shift starts to pay off further, the workplace messaging app Slack will find it increasingly difficult to compete with Microsoft’s Teams initiative and could lose market share, according to Ives and Backe’s forecast.
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