Microsoft stock has shed 32% from its October 2025 all-time high of $540, dragging shares to $369 as of April 2, 2026. The selloff started after Q2 FY2026 earnings wiped $357 billion in market cap in a single session — the worst day for MSFT since 2020. But underneath that wreckage sits a company generating $81.3 billion in quarterly revenue, growing cloud at 26%, and sitting on $625 billion in locked-in future contracts. The question for investors: is this capitulation, or is the market finally catching up to the reality that even Microsoft can’t spend $80 billion a year on AI infrastructure without margin consequences?
Key Financial Metrics at a Glance
| Metric | Value | Context |
|---|---|---|
| Stock Price | $369 | Down 32% from ATH ($540) |
| Market Cap | ~$2.75 trillion | Third-largest globally |
| Forward P/E | ~22x | Lowest in 3 years |
| Q2 FY2026 Revenue | $81.3 billion | +17% YoY, beat by $1.1B |
| Q2 FY2026 EPS | $4.14 | Beat estimate by 5.3% |
| Azure Growth | 39% YoY | 9 consecutive quarters at 30%+ |
| Commercial RPO | $625 billion | +110% YoY |
| Operating Margin | 46.7% | Industry-leading |
| Annual Capex Run Rate | ~$80 billion | +66% YoY in Q2 FY2026 |
| Dividend Yield | ~0.90% | 15 consecutive years of growth |
Investment Thesis: Why Microsoft Dominates the AI Infrastructure Race
Satya Nadella framed it bluntly on the Q2 FY2026 earnings call: “We are only at the beginning phases of AI diffusion and already Microsoft has built an AI business that is larger than some of our biggest franchises.” That is not hyperbole. Azure generated over $75 billion in trailing twelve-month revenue by mid-2025, growing at 40% year-over-year before moderating slightly to 39% in the December quarter. The deceleration spooked Wall Street, but CFO Amy Hood clarified that Azure growth would have been higher had Microsoft not diverted data center capacity to internal AI projects like Copilot and internal R&D.
The math works out: rather than selling raw compute to third parties at cloud margins, Microsoft is consuming that capacity internally for products that command near-100% incremental margins. Guggenheim analyst John DiFucci estimated that Copilot could add about 30% revenue uplift to the Microsoft 365 segment at margins near 100%. With 4.7 million paying Copilot subscribers growing at 75% year-over-year, that bet is starting to pay off.
Quarterly Earnings Breakdown
Q2 FY2026 (Quarter Ended December 31, 2025)
The numbers were strong. The stock still got destroyed. Total revenue hit $81.3 billion, beating consensus by over a billion dollars. EPS of $4.14 topped the $3.93 estimate by 5.3%. Operating income grew 21% to $38.3 billion, and Microsoft Cloud revenue reached $51.5 billion, up 26% year-over-year.
So why did MSFT drop 10% in a single session? Two reasons. First, Azure growth of 39% missed the 39.4% StreetAccount consensus (a trivial miss), but after three quarters of acceleration, any deceleration triggers algorithmic selling. Second, capital expenditure exploded to $37.5 billion for the quarter alone, with two-thirds allocated to AI GPUs and infrastructure. Free cash flow declined by $5.9 billion. Investors suddenly questioned whether the AI buildout would deliver returns proportional to the spend.
| Segment | Q2 FY2026 Revenue | YoY Growth |
|---|---|---|
| Microsoft Cloud (total) | $51.5 billion | +26% |
| Intelligent Cloud | ~$30.2 billion | +21% |
| Productivity & Business | ~$30.5 billion | +15% |
| More Personal Computing | ~$13.4 billion | +6% |
| Microsoft 365 Commercial | — | +15% |
| Dynamics 365 | — | +16% |
| Search & News Advertising | — | +21% |
Q1 FY2026 (Quarter Ended September 30, 2025)
Revenue reached $77.7 billion, up 18% year-over-year. Net income hit $27.7 billion GAAP ($30.8 billion non-GAAP). Azure growth peaked at 40%, marking the ninth consecutive quarter above 30%. Commercial remaining performance obligations climbed 51% to $392 billion, with bookings more than doubling thanks to major OpenAI contracts. Operating income grew 24% to $38 billion, and EPS came in at $4.13, up 23%.
Q3 FY2025 (Quarter Ended March 31, 2025)
Revenue of $70.1 billion grew 13%. Net income climbed 18% to $25.8 billion. Azure grew 33%, and the Intelligent Cloud segment delivered $26.8 billion in revenue. The stock surged 11% in the five trading days following the report, partly recovering from tariff-related weakness earlier in April.
Azure: The $75 Billion Engine
Azure is the financial backbone of Microsoft’s AI strategy. Trailing twelve-month Azure revenue surpassed $75 billion in mid-2025, growing 34% overall with the AI-specific portion growing even faster. The platform has over 4 million business clients and serves as the exclusive infrastructure for OpenAI’s API products.
The growth trajectory tells a compelling story: Azure grew 33% in Q3 FY2025, accelerated to 40% in Q1 FY2026, then moderated to 39% in Q2 FY2026. Barclays analyst Raimo Lenschow noted this may be the practical ceiling: “It now looks like the company will not really accelerate Azure further from here, due to the law of large numbers.” But the deceleration is partly by design. Microsoft is diverting capacity to higher-margin internal products rather than maximizing raw Azure revenue growth.
Operating margins tell the real story. Azure operating margins expanded from 29% in 2015 to 44.73% by 2025. Microsoft’s overall operating margin of 46.7% dwarfs Amazon’s 11.2%, and the gap is widening as AI services command premium pricing. Azure now hosts models from OpenAI, Anthropic (Claude), xAI (Grok), Meta (Llama), and DeepSeek. That makes it the broadest AI model marketplace in cloud computing.
The OpenAI Partnership: $250 Billion in Committed Azure Spend
The Microsoft-OpenAI relationship underwent a structural overhaul in October 2025. OpenAI converted to a public benefit corporation valued at $500 billion, and Microsoft received a 27% equity stake worth around $135 billion, nearly 10x its cumulative $13.8 billion investment since 2019.
The financial commitment is staggering: OpenAI pledged $250 billion in Azure cloud purchases over time. In Q2 FY2026 alone, OpenAI-related Azure revenue reached $7.6 billion. That single relationship now represents about 45% of Microsoft’s $625 billion commercial remaining performance obligations.
But the partnership is no longer exclusive. OpenAI signed a $38 billion, seven-year deal with AWS in November 2025 and has committed $300 billion to Oracle’s infrastructure. ChatGPT has scaled to 800 million weekly users, and OpenAI has locked in over 26 gigawatts of computing capacity across multiple vendors. Microsoft reportedly considered legal action over the AWS deal, claiming it may violate the original exclusivity terms, though no suit has been filed.
The concentration risk is real: if OpenAI (not expected to reach profitability until 2029) stumbles, Microsoft’s $281 billion RPO from that relationship becomes a question mark rather than an asset.
AI Strategy Beyond OpenAI
The Anthropic Alliance
Microsoft is not betting solely on OpenAI. In November 2025, a three-way partnership with NVIDIA and Anthropic was announced. Anthropic committed to $30 billion in Azure compute with capacity to expand to 1 gigawatt. Microsoft and NVIDIA each committed up to $10 billion to Anthropic. Claude models are now integrated into GitHub Copilot, Microsoft 365 Copilot, and Copilot Studio, with spend nearing a $500 million annual run-rate.
Copilot Monetization
Copilot is Microsoft’s most important AI product bet. The platform has 4.7 million paying subscribers, growing 75% year-over-year, with around 150 million monthly active users of AI features across Microsoft products and 900 million total monthly active users in the broader ecosystem. Guggenheim’s DiFucci described Microsoft’s advantage as a “dual monopoly”: Azure for cloud infrastructure plus Office/M365 for productivity, with Copilot as the bridge extracting AI premiums from an already captive user base.
Custom Silicon: Maia 200
Microsoft launched its Maia 200 in-house AI inference chip, which outperforms Amazon’s and Google’s equivalents on several benchmarks. This reduces long-term dependency on NVIDIA and its pricing power. The company also secured about $20 billion in Nvidia GPU access through 2031, hedging both approaches simultaneously.
Capital Expenditure: The $80 Billion Question
Microsoft’s capex trajectory is the single biggest investor debate. Q2 FY2026 capex hit $37.5 billion (a 66% year-over-year increase), with two-thirds going to AI GPUs and infrastructure. Half of that spend is classified as “short-lived” equipment, meaning accelerated depreciation will pressure margins for years.
The FY2026 consensus sits around $80 billion in total capital investment. Microsoft is expanding AI data center capacity by about 80% this fiscal year alone. But the company has also shown discipline: in early 2025, it abandoned data center projects consuming about 2 gigawatts across the US, UK, Australia, and several US states, pivoting to optimize existing facilities rather than build new ones. TD Cowen analysts confirmed this pullback through channel checks at NVIDIA’s GTC event.
The global investment footprint is massive: $15.2 billion committed to the UAE through 2029, $30 billion to the UK, $17.4 billion through the Nebius partnership for GPU infrastructure, and $3 billion in India. Jeremy Goldman of eMarketer summarized the consensus view: “Microsoft didn’t declare victory on AI, but it made a credible case that the spending has a path to payback.”
Competitive Positioning
Microsoft vs. AWS vs. Google Cloud
The cloud wars have a clear hierarchy in growth rates. Azure grew 39–40% in recent quarters, Google Cloud hit 34%, and AWS trailed at 20%. AWS still holds about 30% of global cloud infrastructure market share, but the gap in growth rates suggests Microsoft is taking share, particularly in AI workloads where its OpenAI and Anthropic partnerships give it model diversity that AWS cannot match.
Google parent Alphabet announced $75 billion in 2025 capex, and Meta committed $65 billion. Both are backfilling data center capacity that Microsoft abandoned. The AI infrastructure race is a three-front war, and all three are spending at levels that would have seemed absurd two years ago.
Microsoft vs. Apple: The $4 Trillion Race
Microsoft and Apple both joined the $4 trillion market cap club in October 2025 before the selloff pulled Microsoft back. The fundamental difference: Apple trades at a premium on hardware margins and buybacks, while Microsoft trades on cloud growth and AI optionality. Apple’s AI strategy (Apple Intelligence) targets on-device processing; Microsoft’s targets enterprise infrastructure. They are barely competing with each other, which is why both stocks belong in a diversified tech portfolio.
Wall Street Consensus: What Analysts Are Saying
| Firm | Analyst | Rating | Price Target |
|---|---|---|---|
| Goldman Sachs | — | Buy | $655 |
| TD Cowen | — | Buy | $625 |
| UBS | Karl Kierstead | Buy | $650 |
| Wedbush | Dan Ives | Top Pick | $625 |
| Wells Fargo | — | Overweight | $600 |
| Oppenheimer | Brian Schwartz | Buy | $600 |
| Guggenheim | John DiFucci | Buy | $586 |
| Piper Sandler | — | Buy | $600 |
| BMO Capital | — | Buy | $550 |
| Morgan Stanley | — | Overweight | $530 |
The consensus is overwhelmingly bullish. Of 31 analysts covering MSFT as of early 2026, 94% rate it Buy or Strong Buy with zero Sell ratings. The median price target of $600 implies over 60% upside from the current $369 level. Bernstein’s Mark Moerdler named Microsoft his number-one software pick for 2026, arguing that “management made a cognizant decision to focus on what is best for the company long term rather than driving the stock up this quarter.”
The most aggressive target comes from Goldman Sachs at $655, while the most vocal bull remains Wedbush’s Dan Ives, who calls MSFT his top pick and argues that “investors are undervaluing the Azure growth story.”
Bull Case: Why Microsoft Could Hit $600+
1. Valuation compression creates a rare entry point. At around 22x forward earnings, MSFT trades at its lowest multiple in three years. Every prior drawdown of this magnitude — COVID (-28%), 2022 inflation shock (-37.6%), 2018 correction (-18.6%) all resolved with full recoveries, typically within 12-18 months. Microsoft recovered from the 2022 selloff by June 2023 and consistently outperformed the S&P 500 during drawdown periods.
2. The $625 billion RPO is locked-in revenue. Commercial remaining performance obligations grew 110% year-over-year, with about 40% expected to convert to revenue within 12 months. This is not speculative pipeline. It is contractually committed spend.
3. Copilot monetization is inflecting. With 4.7 million paying subscribers at near-100% incremental margins, Copilot represents the highest-margin growth vector in Microsoft’s history. The agentic AI market is projected to reach $500 billion by 2030, and Microsoft’s 900 million monthly active users give it unmatched distribution.
4. Smart money is buying. Peter Thiel purchased 50,000 MSFT shares in Q3 2025, choosing Microsoft over Nvidia and Tesla. Institutional positioning typically leads retail sentiment by 2-3 quarters.
5. Operating leverage is extraordinary. Revenue grew 17% while operating expenses grew just 5%. Microsoft returned $12.7 billion to shareholders via buybacks and dividends in Q2 FY2026 alone, adding to $364 billion over the past decade. This is a capital allocation machine.
Bear Case: The Risks That Could Keep MSFT Below $500
1. Capex is crushing free cash flow. Capital expenditure of $37.5 billion in a single quarter reduced FCF by $5.9 billion. Half of the AI infrastructure spend is classified as short-lived equipment with accelerated depreciation, meaning margin headwinds of about 200 basis points through FY2026. If the AI revenue ramp disappoints, this spend becomes a drag, not an investment.
2. OpenAI concentration risk is extreme. OpenAI accounts for 45% of Microsoft’s $625 billion RPO, about $281 billion. OpenAI is not expected to reach profitability until 2029. If OpenAI’s business model falters, or if Sam Altman diversifies compute away from Azure faster than expected (the AWS and Oracle deals suggest this is already happening), the RPO figure becomes less reliable.
3. Azure growth may have peaked. The deceleration from 40% to 39% coincides with the law of large numbers on a $75 billion+ revenue base. Capacity constraints are real. Microsoft acknowledged demand exceeds supply through at least H1 FY2026. But constraints also cap growth, creating a ceiling effect that frustrates momentum investors.
4. Gross margin pressure is structural. Gross margins fell to 68.59% in Q2 FY2026 and further compression is expected. Rising depreciation from AI infrastructure, along with compensation costs, could squeeze operating margins by 200+ basis points.
5. Regulatory and competitive headwinds. Japan is investigating Azure for anti-competitive cloud practices. Italy is pursuing VAT claims against LinkedIn. AWS and Google Cloud are investing at similar scale. And DeepSeek demonstrated that competitive AI models can be built with far fewer resources (2,788 GPUs versus OpenAI’s 10,000), raising questions about whether Microsoft’s massive infrastructure bet is necessary or oversized.
Valuation Analysis: Is $369 a Fair Price?
| Valuation Metric | MSFT (April 2026) | Historical Avg | Sector Avg |
|---|---|---|---|
| Forward P/E | ~22x | 28–33x (2023–2025) | ~25x (mega-cap tech) |
| P/S Ratio | ~10x | 12–13x | ~8x |
| EV/EBITDA | ~18x | 22–26x | ~20x |
| Operating Margin | 46.7% | 42–45% (5-yr) | ~25% (sector) |
| Revenue Growth (TTM) | 16.7% | 14–16% | ~10% |
| Debt-to-Equity | 0.02 | <0.5 | Varies |
At $369, Microsoft trades at a forward P/E around 22x, well below its five-year average of 28-33x and cheaper than the broader mega-cap tech sector average of 25x. The stock has not been this cheap relative to its own history since the pre-AI rally of early 2023. A DCF model assuming 8-10% earnings growth yields a bear case valuation around $365, meaning shares are trading near floor levels. The bull case, assuming Azure growth stabilizes at 35%+ and Copilot monetization accelerates, supports valuations above $550.
Trefis calculated an intrinsic value of about $420 per share using trailing earnings of 25x and operating earnings of 20x. At $369, shares trade below even that conservative fair value estimate, which is why growth investors see the current price as a discount rather than a trap. They are buying for the asymmetric upside if AI spending translates into sustained 20%+ revenue growth.
Major Partnerships and Strategic Deals
| Deal | Value | Strategic Impact |
|---|---|---|
| OpenAI equity stake | 27% ($135B value) | 10x return on $13.8B invested; Azure exclusivity for API products |
| OpenAI Azure commitment | $250 billion | Largest cloud contract in history; multi-decade revenue lock |
| Anthropic partnership | $30B Azure compute + $10B equity | Claude in Copilot; hedges OpenAI dependency |
| UAE investment | $15.2 billion | 5x typical country investment; GPU access via US gov approval |
| UK investment | $30 billion | 23,000 AI chips deployed; regulatory goodwill post-Activision |
| Nebius Group | $17.4 billion | GPU infrastructure scaling; Nebius stock surged 45% |
| IBM Practice | 33,000+ consultants | Enterprise distribution for Azure + Copilot |
| India investment | $3 billion | AI talent pipeline; cloud market share |
| NVIDIA GPU access | ~$20 billion | Supply secured through 2031 |
Risk Factors
AI infrastructure ROI uncertainty. At $80 billion in annual capex, Microsoft needs AI revenue to grow substantially faster than the infrastructure costs. If enterprise AI adoption stalls or if cheaper alternatives (like DeepSeek) reduce willingness to pay premium prices, the return on this investment could disappoint.
OpenAI dependency. A single partner represents 45% of the total RPO backlog. OpenAI is already diversifying to AWS and Oracle. Sam Altman’s compensation ($76,000 per year with no equity) creates unusual governance dynamics for a $500 billion company.
Regulatory pressure. Antitrust investigations in Japan (Azure cloud practices), Italy (LinkedIn VAT), and potential action over the Amazon-OpenAI deal create legal overhang. The Pentagon’s blacklisting of Anthropic also indirectly affects Microsoft’s ability to deploy Claude in government contracts.
Workforce restructuring. Microsoft laid off about 6,500 employees (3% of the global workforce) in May 2025, following 10,000 layoffs in early 2023. While framed as organizational realignment, consecutive rounds of cuts signal that even Microsoft is not immune to cost pressures.
Windows 10 transition risk. End of support for Windows 10 affects about 60% of corporate devices globally. While this creates an upgrade catalyst, it also creates security exposure for the millions of organizations that delay migration.
How to Invest in Microsoft Stock
MSFT trades on NASDAQ under the ticker MSFT. The stock is available through any major brokerage and is one of the most liquid equities in the world. With a dividend yield of about 0.90% and 15 consecutive years of dividend growth, it appeals to both growth and income investors. The company returned $12.7 billion to shareholders in Q2 FY2026 through buybacks and dividends, continuing a decade-long pattern that has distributed $364 billion to investors.
Dollar-cost averaging at current levels makes particular sense given the 32% drawdown from the all-time high. Historical analysis shows that every major MSFT selloff (2008 at -59%, 2020 at -28%, 2022 at -37.6%) resolved with full recovery, though the 2008 drawdown took until 2013 to fully recover to previous highs.
The Bottom Line
Microsoft at $369 is either a generational buying opportunity or a value trap, and the answer depends entirely on whether $80 billion per year in AI spending generates proportional returns. The data tilts bullish: 46.7% operating margins, $625 billion in locked-in contracts, 39% Azure growth, and a forward P/E around 22x, cheaper than the stock has been in three years.
The bear case is not about Microsoft’s business quality. It is about the pace of AI monetization relative to spending. If Copilot subscriber growth sustains 75% year-over-year and Azure maintains 35%+ growth, $600 is achievable within 12–18 months. If capex continues without corresponding revenue acceleration, $370 could be the new ceiling rather than the floor.
With 94% of analysts rating MSFT a buy and a median target of $600, Wall Street has made its bet. The question is whether you trust their math or the market’s verdict.
Is Microsoft stock a good buy right now in 2026?
At $369 per share, Microsoft trades at around 22x forward earnings — its lowest valuation in three years. With 94% of analysts rating it Buy and a median price target of $600 (implying over 60% upside), Wall Street consensus is overwhelmingly bullish. The stock’s 32% decline from its October 2025 high of $540 creates a potential entry point, though the ~$80 billion annual capex commitment adds uncertainty about near-term margin trajectory.
What is Microsoft’s price target for 2026?
Analyst price targets range from $530 (Morgan Stanley) to $655 (Goldman Sachs), with the median at $600. Wedbush’s Dan Ives has a $625 target and calls MSFT his top pick. UBS targets $650 citing AI and cloud momentum. A DCF bear case assuming 8–10% earnings growth yields about $365.
How fast is Microsoft Azure growing?
Azure grew 39% year-over-year in Q2 FY2026 (December 2025 quarter), following 40% growth in Q1 FY2026. The platform has delivered nine consecutive quarters of 30%+ growth and surpassed $75 billion in trailing twelve-month revenue. Microsoft is expanding AI data center capacity by about 80% in FY2026.
What is Microsoft’s relationship with OpenAI?
Microsoft owns a 27% equity stake in OpenAI (valued at ~$135 billion) after investing $13.8 billion since 2019. OpenAI has committed $250 billion in Azure cloud purchases. However, the partnership is no longer exclusive — OpenAI signed a $38 billion deal with AWS and a $300 billion commitment with Oracle. OpenAI-related Azure revenue was $7.6 billion in Q2 FY2026.
Does Microsoft pay a dividend?
Yes. Microsoft has increased its dividend for 15 consecutive years. The current yield is about 0.90%. In Q2 FY2026, Microsoft returned $12.7 billion to shareholders through dividends and buybacks. Over the past decade, total shareholder returns via buybacks and dividends have reached $364 billion.
What is Microsoft Copilot and how is it performing?
Copilot is Microsoft’s AI assistant integrated across Microsoft 365, GitHub, and other products. It has 4.7 million paying subscribers (growing 75% year-over-year) and around 150 million monthly active users. Guggenheim estimates Copilot could add ~30% revenue uplift to the M365 segment at near-100% incremental margins.
Why did Microsoft stock drop after strong earnings?
MSFT fell about 10% after Q2 FY2026 earnings (January 29, 2026) despite beating on both revenue and EPS. The selloff was triggered by Azure growth of 39% narrowly missing the 39.4% consensus, combined with capex surging 66% to $37.5 billion. Free cash flow declined by $5.9 billion, and the More Personal Computing segment guidance disappointed.
How does Microsoft compare to other mega-cap tech stocks?
Microsoft’s operating margin of 46.7% leads mega-cap tech (vs. Amazon’s 11.2%). Azure growth at 39% outpaces AWS (20%) and trails only Google Cloud (34%) in growth rate. At around 22x forward P/E, MSFT trades cheaper than its 5-year average (28-33x) and cheaper than Alphabet. The $625 billion RPO backlog is unmatched in the sector.