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    You are at:Home » Why Microsoft Stock Price Is Sitting 33% Below Its Peak — and What Needs to Happen Before It Recovers
    Microsoft stock price
    Microsoft stock price
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    Why Microsoft Stock Price Is Sitting 33% Below Its Peak — and What Needs to Happen Before It Recovers

    Radio TandilBy Radio Tandil7 April 2026No Comments5 Mins Read31 Views
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    There is a company that has been doing remarkably well by almost every financial metric on the well-kept corporate campus in Redmond, Washington, where Microsoft’s glass buildings sit amid well-kept green spaces and the Pacific Northwest sky turns the entire scene a particular shade of grey in winter. Revenue has increased by 17% annually. Azure Cloud is expanding by 39%. Earnings per share and revenue estimates were exceeded for three quarters in a row. However, as of early April 2026, MSFT is trading at about $372, down about 23% from the beginning of the year and 33% below its 52-week high of $555.45 from July of last year. One side of the ledger’s numbers convey a single message. Another is said by the stock. It’s important to comprehend that gap.

    Capital expenditures are the main source of conflict. Microsoft revealed that it was investing up to $37.5 billion in developing the data center infrastructure needed to support its AI products, including Copilot, Azure, and the OpenAI partnership that powers the majority of them. Wall Street had hoped for moderation. It accelerated. In a recent note, Goldman Sachs analyst Gabriela Borges put it simply: capital expenditures have continued to rise, but Azure sales forecasts haven’t been revised upward in proportion.

    CategoryDetails
    Company NameMicrosoft Corporation
    Ticker SymbolMSFT (NASDAQ)
    FoundedApril 4, 1975 — Albuquerque, New Mexico
    FoundersBill Gates, Paul Allen
    CEOSatya Nadella (February 4, 2014–present)
    HeadquartersRedmond, Washington, United States
    Employees~228,000 (2025)
    Current Stock Price (Apr 6, 2026)$372.88 (-0.16%)
    52-Week High$555.45 (July 31, 2025)
    52-Week Low$344.79
    Market Cap~$2.77 trillion
    P/E Ratio (TTM)23.33
    Q2 2026 Revenue$81.27 billion (+16.72% Y/Y)
    Azure Revenue Growth+39% year-over-year
    Capital ExpenditureUp to $37.5 billion (data center investment)
    Next Earnings DateApril 29, 2026
    Analyst Average Price TargetNot publicly specified; consensus remains cautiously constructive
    Official Websitemicrosoft.com/investor

    This has rekindled concerns about return on investment and whether Microsoft’s competitive position in the cloud is strengthening or just holding ground against Amazon Web Services. The market’s tolerance for the story has been eroding since the January 28 earnings report, which initially caused the stock to drop by almost 10% in a single session. Dan Ives of Wedbush refuted that response, characterizing it as “a multi-year development process,” contending that Microsoft must continue constructing data centers since enterprise AI adoption is still in its early stages. He might be correct. However, the market has been making a clear distinction between right for a stock price and right on a long timeline.

    The Azure numbers are worthy of greater recognition than they currently receive. A cloud company that is expanding at a rate of 39% per year is not in danger. Large enterprises moving to AI-powered infrastructure are the customers driving this business’s significant growth while absorbing massive investment; once initiated, this transition tends to be sticky. “Microsoft’s two core business pillars have each reached a scale nearing $100 billion — Azure continues to grow at over 30% despite capacity constraints, while Microsoft 365’s commercial business maintains mid-teens growth,” said Mark Murphy of JPMorgan.This combination of scale and growth rate is exceptionally potent. The capex cycle is temporarily putting pressure on the profit margins. That is not the same as a business’s structural decline.

    Copilot and Microsoft 365 are the subject of the second issue. The concern, subtly expressed in analyst notes, is that competitors’ AI-driven productivity tools, particularly Claude and other large language models being incorporated into enterprise workflows, may eventually weaken Microsoft’s monopoly on business software. Though speculative, this is not without merit.

    Due to the high switching costs and the genuine quality of the products, Microsoft’s Office suite was unbeatable for decades. Although the situation hasn’t changed significantly, there is now a level of uncertainty that wasn’t present two years ago due to the emergence of capable AI alternatives. It didn’t help that it was recently discovered that Microsoft Copilot’s terms of service state that the product is “for entertainment purposes only” (a phrase that quietly went viral on social media prior to Microsoft calling it “legacy language”). Even though the legal language was a mistake, it created an awkward moment for a product that the company has marketed as a serious productivity tool, and the optics of that gap were challenging.

    Microsoft is not standing still in the meantime. Building on a $2.9 billion commitment in 2024 and collaborating with SoftBank, Sakura Internet, and a group of domestic Japanese tech companies, the company announced a $10 billion investment in Japan’s AI infrastructure and workforce development. The investment is intended to train one million engineers by 2030 and construct domestically controlled AI infrastructure, a model Japan specifically needs for data sovereignty. In light of the fact that generative AI usage in Japan is already surpassing global averages, this is a sizable wager on the growth of AI internationally. Despite investors’ worries about short-term profit margins, Microsoft is not using this as an excuse to retreat.

    It’s difficult to ignore the fact that the stock’s current P/E ratio of 23.33 is significantly lower than both Apple’s current 32 and the 30-plus multiples it was carrying a year ago. This compression is not a judgment on the long-term business, but rather the market pricing in short-term margin pressure from capital expenditure. According to Goldman Sachs, risks and rewards are “roughly balanced” before the company releases its earnings on April 29. That’s cautious language coming from a bank that has seen this stock drop by almost 25% in just four months, despite the underlying revenue and cloud numbers continuing to print higher than anticipated.

    Observing MSFT trade in this range gives the impression that the market is pressuring Microsoft to demonstrate the value of its data center investment—not in the distant future, but in the near future. The next tangible chance for that is the report on April 29. The business has the basics. The more pressing question is whether it has the patience of the investors who have been observing that 52-week chart.

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