Revenue growth in public‑cloud software has re‑accelerated to 19% year‑on‑year in the first quarter, according to the latest Bessemer Cloud Index data. The median figure reflects the performance of 70 listed companies that specialise in delivering software over the internet. The jump ends a multi‑year slowdown and signals that artificial‑intelligence workloads are now a material source of new revenue for the sector.
The Bessemer Cloud Index tracks a cross‑section of public‑cloud firms, ranging from pure‑play SaaS providers to hybrid infrastructure operators. By using the median rather than the mean, the index filters out outliers and offers a clearer view of the core market trend. The 19% median growth marks the strongest quarterly pace since early 2022, and it arrives at a time when investors are reassessing the sector’s growth narrative.
Q1 marks the third straight quarter of acceleration after the cohort hit a trough of 14.3% growth in mid‑2024. The trough followed a period of muted demand as enterprises delayed cloud spend amid macro uncertainty. Since then, the index has climbed steadily, first to 16.8% in Q4 2024 and now to 19% in Q1 2025. The consistency of the rebound suggests that the slowdown was cyclical rather than structural.
AI workloads are the primary catalyst behind the renewed momentum. Companies that have integrated generative‑AI models into their platforms report higher usage rates and longer contract durations. The shift from experimentation to production use cases has turned AI from a cost centre into a revenue driver. Vendors that bundle AI APIs with existing subscription tiers see incremental spend that lifts the top line without eroding gross margins.
Free‑cash‑flow margins have moved in tandem with revenue growth. The median FCF margin across the index now sits at 21.4%, edging closer to the 25% median recorded in early 2021. The improvement reflects both stronger cash generation from higher subscription renewals and tighter cost control as firms scale their data‑center footprints.
Margin expansion is rooted in three operational levers. First, pricing power has returned as demand outpaces supply for AI‑enhanced services. Second, automation of support and monitoring functions has reduced headcount intensity. Third, a shift toward higher‑margin AI and analytics modules has improved the product mix. Together, these factors compress operating expenses while preserving revenue growth.
Allocator sentiment has turned markedly positive. EPFR data show that long‑only mutual funds have recorded net‑inflows into the software category for nine consecutive months, the longest streak since 2021. The inflows coincide with the index’s revenue acceleration and suggest that fund managers view the sector as a reliable source of earnings growth and cash return.
For capital allocators, the data point to a rebalancing opportunity. Higher free‑cash‑flow margins translate into stronger dividend coverage and greater flexibility for share buybacks. The combination of accelerating top‑line growth and expanding cash generation narrows the risk‑adjusted return gap between cloud software and more traditional technology segments.
Looking ahead, the index is likely to face a test in the second quarter as AI‑related capital spending competes with broader enterprise budget constraints. Analysts will watch for signs of pricing pressure, especially in the generative‑AI API market, and for any slowdown in renewal rates as contracts mature. Absent a major macro shock, the trend line suggests that the sector can sustain growth above 18% year‑on‑year for the remainder of the year.
