Microsoft Gains on Amazon in Cloud Market Battle
February 9, 2022
New
data from Synergy Research Group shows that Q4 enterprise spending on cloud
infrastructure services passed the $50 billion mark, up 36% from the fourth
quarter of 2020. Total year spending reached $178 billion, up 37% from 2020.
Amazon continues to lead the market with its worldwide market share staying
almost constant at 32-33%. In Q4 its annual growth once again came in a little
above the growth of the overall market.
Meanwhile Microsoft continues on its charge with its market share growing by
almost nine percentage points since the end of 2017, reaching 21% in the fourth
quarter. Google and Alibaba also continue to grow market share, while in
aggregate the long tail of small-to-medium sized cloud providers see revenues
growing steadily but market shares declining.

With most of the major cloud providers having now released their earnings data
for Q4, Synergy estimates that quarterly cloud infrastructure service revenues
(including IaaS, PaaS and hosted private cloud services) were $50.5 billion,
with trailing twelve-month revenues reaching $178 billion. Public IaaS and PaaS
services account for the bulk of the market and those grew by 38% in Q4. The
dominance of the major cloud providers is even more pronounced in public cloud,
where the top three control 71% of the market. Geographically, the cloud market
continues to grow strongly in all regions of the world.
“It
is a strong testimony to the value and attractiveness of cloud services that the
2021 market growth rate actually exceeded 2020 growth, despite the enormous
scale that has already been achieved. Enterprises are now spending twice as much
on cloud services as they spend on their own data centers,” said John Dinsdale,
a Chief Analyst at Synergy Research Group. “Meanwhile the battle for market
share is getting more interesting. Amazon continues to lead by a wide margin,
but Microsoft, Google and Alibaba all continue to grow more rapidly. Microsoft’s
market share is making impressive gains and is now just eleven percentage points
behind Amazon. The rising tide continues to lift all boats, but some are being
lifted more swiftly than others.” |