Stay informed with free updates
Simply sign up to the Big tech myFT Digest — delivered directly to your inbox.
Microsoft briefly usurped Apple to become the world’s biggest company by market value on Thursday, as the boom in artificial intelligence brought a new twist to the decades-long rivalry between the two Big Tech groups.
The software company’s shares climbed around 1 per cent in early trading on Thursday to take its market value to $2.87tn, just ahead of the iPhone maker, whose shares fell by almost 1 per cent.
By midday in New York, Apple had retaken the top spot as the broader market turned lower. At the close of trading in New York, Apple remained ahead at $2.89tn compared to Microsoft’s $2.86tn.
Investors’ excitement about the new wave of generative AI has fuelled a rally in the shares of Microsoft, which is the biggest backer of OpenAI, the maker of the popular AI-powered chatbot ChatGPT.
Apple has largely been left out of the AI fervour that has propelled Microsoft, which is OpenAI’s largest backer and cloud hosting provider as well as a pioneer in deploying AI chatbots across its search and workplace products.
At the same time, concerns about weaker iPhone sales — particularly in China — have weighed on Apple’s stock in the first few days of 2024, prompting a series of Wall Street analyst downgrades.
Apple and Microsoft have been rivals since the 1980s, when the company founded by Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak accused Bill Gates’ Windows maker of stealing the “look and feel” of its Macintosh computer software. Apple lost a high-profile copyright lawsuit targeting Windows in the early 1990s, clearing the way for Microsoft to dominate the PC market for decades.
But driven by the success of the iPhone, Apple’s market value finally overtook Microsoft in 2010, a position it retained for several years as Windows struggled with the transition to mobile computing.
Microsoft briefly rallied above Apple during the Covid-19 pandemic in 2020 and 2021, as its strength in cloud computing during the boom in remote working made its business more resilient at a time when iPhone production was disrupted by factory closures and supply issues. However, on each occasion Apple reclaimed the top spot soon after.
While its old rival is focused on AI, Apple is hoping the launch of its new Vision Pro headset next month will usher in a new era of “spatial computing” that relies on rich 3D graphics and new kinds of hand gestures to make interaction more natural and intuitive.
Despite hints that Apple is developing the same kind of large language models that power the latest AI chatbots to run on its own devices, the runaway success of ChatGPT and the industry-wide scramble to catch up with it has buoyed demand for Microsoft’s cloud services as well as the Nvidia processors that are needed to create such tools.
The AI-driven shake-up in the rankings of the world’s top companies has also brought AI chipmaker Nvidia, whose stock is up around 11 per cent this year, within reach of surpassing Amazon’s market capitalisation of $1.6tn.
As well as converging market valuations, Microsoft and Apple are also neck-and-neck in enterprise value, which takes account of the companies’ cash piles.
Additional reporting by Michael Acton