Microsoft ends tradition of naming competitors in regulatory filings

Microsoft ends tradition of naming competitors in regulatory filings


Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella leaves after attending a meeting with Indonesian President Joko Widodo at the Presidential Palace in Jakarta, Indonesia, on April 30, 2024.

Willy Kurniawan | Reuters

Microsoft has abandoned a decades-long tradition of calling out the names of its rivals in regulatory documents.

When the 50-year-old technology company released its annual report Wednesday, the 101-page document contained zero references to longtime foes Apple and IBM. Nor did it mention privately held challengers such as Anthropic or Databricks.

Last year’s Microsoft annual report officially designated over 25 companies as competitors. The names of Microsoft’s enemies have appeared in its annual reports at least since 1994.

The omission means Microsoft is breaking from a common industry practice. Apple, Meta and Nvidia all namedrop the companies they go up against.

It’s not universally followed, though. Amazon has not identified competitors in annual reports since 1999. Tesla last did it in 2020, and Alphabet halted after 2022.

Now, Microsoft just says it faces competition in a wide variety of markets, including productivity software, PC operating systems and cloud infrastructure.

The more specific disclosures helped to show where companies stood with the biggest name in software. In 2024, Microsoft started referring to key partner OpenAI as a competitor, after the artificial intelligence startup introduced a web search feature.

A Microsoft spokesperson told CNBC that the company updated the competition portion of the annual report to address larger categories. The new format reflects the fast-moving nature of the markets in which the company operates, the spokesperson said.

That’s not to say Microsoft executives have stopped tracking developments at other technology companies.

CEO Satya Nadella referred to Amazon on Microsoft’s earnings call on Wednesday.

Scott Guthrie, executive vice president of Microsoft’s cloud and AI group, said at a conference in May that “there are some cloud providers, like AWS, that still haven’t launched a GB200 offering.”

Nvidia’s GB200 NVL72 systems include 72 interconnected graphics processing units.

Microsoft shares climbed Thursday, a day after the company issued quarterly results and guidance that came in better than expected. The stock move sent the company’s market capitalization past the $4 trillion mark.

WATCH: Microsoft shares spike on earnings and revenue beat

Microsoft shares spike on earnings and revenue beat



Source

Intel’s stock soars 16% as results top estimates, with chipmaker showing signs of growth
Technology

Intel’s stock soars 16% as results top estimates, with chipmaker showing signs of growth

Intel CEO Lip-Bu Tan holds a wafer of CPU tiles for the Intel Core Ultra series 3, code-named Panther Lake, outside the Intel Ocotillo campus in Chandler, Arizona. Courtesy: Intel Intel reported first-quarter earnings Thursday that blew past Wall Street’s expectations, as the struggling chipmaker shows signs of a revival. Shares of the U.S. chipmaker […]

Read More
Meta will cut 10% of workforce as company pushes deeper into AI
Technology

Meta will cut 10% of workforce as company pushes deeper into AI

Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg leaves the Federal Courthouse in downtown Los Angeles after defending the company in a landmark social media addiction trial in Los Angeles, United States, on February 19, 2026. Jon Putman | Anadolu | Getty Images Meta plans to lay off 10% of its workforce, equaling about 8,000 jobs, as it continues […]

Read More
Texas Instruments’ stock jumps 18%, heads for best day since 2000 as AI demand soars
Technology

Texas Instruments’ stock jumps 18%, heads for best day since 2000 as AI demand soars

Haviv Ilan, president and chief executive officer of Texas Instruments (TI), speaks during a ribbon-cutting ceremony for the grand opening of Texas Instruments’ (TI) new semiconductor wafer plant in Sherman, Texas, US, on Wednesday, Dec. 17, 2025. Desiree Rios | Bloomberg | Getty Images Texas Instruments headed for its best day on Wall Street since […]

Read More