Snowflake beats quarterly estimates on strong demand

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Snowflake beats quarterly estimates on strong demand

Cloud data analytics company Snowflake beat second-quarter revenue and profit estimates on Wednesday, boosted by rising data management and storage needs of businesses amid a surge in the use of generative artificial intelligence.

Enterprises are increasingly moving their data and infrastructure to the cloud to improve efficiency, helping cloud-related services companies.

Snowflake offers products and services that clients can use to store, process and consolidate data that helps in producing business insights.

The based revenue rose about 36 per cent to US$674 million for the quarter ended July 31, above analysts' average estimate of US$662.2 million, according to Refinitiv data.

Excluding items, the second-quarter adjusted profit per share was 22 cents, compared with analysts' average estimate of 10 cents.

Snowflake's second-quarter product revenue rose 37 per cent to US$640.2 million, above market estimates of US$623 million.

Snowflake is well-positioned to enable the growing interest in artificial intelligence or machine learning, CEO Frank Slootman said, adding that enterprises "cannot have an AI strategy without a data strategy".

The company forecast third-quarter product revenue in the range of US$670 million to US$675 million, compared with analysts' average estimate of US$670.8 million, according to Refinitiv data.

Snowflake had announced a partnership in June with chip company Nvidia to allow customers ranging from financial institutions to healthcare and retail to build AI models using their own data.

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