Microsoft stock is down about 22% year-to-date, trading around $373.94. That’s the weakest showing among the big tech names. The company has shed over $1 trillion in market cap since last fall.
Microsoft Corporation, MSFT
But there’s a case building that the selloff has gone too far.
Microsoft has been quietly shifting its AI strategy away from pure dependence on OpenAI. At its Build 2026 conference, the company introduced seven internally developed AI models covering reasoning, coding, image generation, voice, and transcription.
These include MAI-Thinking-1, MAI-Code-1-Flash, MAI-Image-2.5, MAI-Voice-2, and MAI-Transcribe-1.5. MAI-Thinking-1 is Microsoft’s first reasoning model, built on a 35 billion active parameter mixture-of-experts architecture with a 256K context window.
Microsoft says its internally tuned models can deliver frontier-level performance on enterprise tasks at roughly 10 times better cost efficiency than competing options.
Azure, Microsoft’s cloud platform, grew around 39% in constant currency during Fiscal Q3 2026, beating both guidance and Street expectations. Cloud revenue hit $54.5 billion, up 29% year-over-year, while Intelligent Cloud revenue came in at $34.7 billion.
Microsoft’s AI annual revenue run rate crossed $37 billion, up 123% year-over-year.
The company says demand is still exceeding available capacity and expects that to continue through at least the end of calendar 2026. That capacity crunch is slowing Azure’s growth ceiling, but it also reflects strong underlying demand.
Capital spending is where investors are getting squeamish. Microsoft has guided to roughly $190 billion in capital spending for calendar 2026, a figure that pushes adjusted free cash flow close to negative territory.
Jefferies analyst Brent Thill says Microsoft has “no self-imposed ceiling” on capex relative to free cash flow. That’s a pointed observation.
To fuel that build-out, Microsoft just signed a 20-year deal with Chevron to supply natural gas power to a massive data center complex in West Texas. The first power delivery from that facility isn’t expected until 2028.
Copilot is also getting a bigger role. Microsoft is positioning it as an enterprise AI control plane through its new “Copilot Super App” architecture, which bundles Chat, Cowork, Code, and Autopilots. The first Autopilot, Scout, runs as an always-on personal agent across Teams, Outlook, and Microsoft 365.
At current prices, Microsoft trades at a trailing P/E of around 22x, below the sector median of roughly 35x. Its price-to-operating cash flow sits at about 16x, also below the sector median of 18x.
Wall Street is largely on board. According to TipRanks, 35 analysts rate MSFT a Buy, one rates it a Hold, and none have a Sell. The average 12-month price target is $562.56.
MAI-Code-1-Flash, one of Microsoft’s smaller models, reportedly hit strong coding benchmarks with just 5 billion parameters. MAI-Transcribe-1.5 supports 43 languages and runs five times faster than competing transcription tools.
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