Why Microsoft (MSFT) Is Down 14.4% After Massive AI Capex Overshadows Strong Q2 Earnings

Simply Wall St
  • In late January 2026, Microsoft reported fiscal Q2 results with revenue of US$81.27 billion and net income of US$38.46 billion, alongside record cloud revenue and the launch of its Maia 200 AI inference chip.
  • Investors, however, fixated on moderating Azure growth, a very large US$37.50 billion AI‑driven capital spending bill, and heavy exposure to OpenAI within a US$625 billion cloud backlog, sparking concern about how quickly these AI bets will translate into durable returns.
  • Next, we’ll examine how this tension between strong current earnings and aggressive AI infrastructure investment is reshaping Microsoft’s investment narrative.

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What Is Microsoft's Investment Narrative?

To own Microsoft after its record Q2, you have to believe that its AI‑heavy cloud franchise, US$625 billion backlog, and in‑house silicon like Maia 200 can justify an enormous US$37.50 billion quarterly capex bill without eroding the attractiveness of its high‑margin software core. The recent Dragos and Appspace integrations, along with deals like Perplexity’s Foundry commitment, mostly reinforce the existing thesis: Azure as a neutral, AI‑rich platform embedded across industries, rather than a one‑off growth spurt. They do not materially change the near‑term catalysts, which still hinge on whether Azure growth stabilizes and Copilot monetization shows up cleanly in revenue and margins. What they do highlight is a growing dependence on a complex AI ecosystem, where partner success, OpenAI concentration risk, and capital discipline now sit front and center for shareholders.

But that concentration around a few large AI partners is a risk investors should not ignore. Despite retreating, Microsoft's shares might still be trading 11% above their fair value. Discover the potential downside here.

Exploring Other Perspectives

MSFT 1-Year Stock Price Chart

Community members on Simply Wall St place Microsoft’s fair value anywhere from US$360 to about US$626.86, across 114 separate views, reflecting very different expectations around AI returns and Azure’s capital needs. With the stock recently hit by worries over massive AI infrastructure spending and backlog concentration in OpenAI, it is worth weighing these dispersed valuations against the real risk that cash‑hungry AI projects could pressure margins longer than many expect.

Explore 114 other fair value estimates on Microsoft - why the stock might be worth 12% less than the current price!

Build Your Own Microsoft Narrative

Disagree with this assessment? Create your own narrative in under 3 minutes - extraordinary investment returns rarely come from following the herd.

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This article by Simply Wall St is general in nature. We provide commentary based on historical data and analyst forecasts only using an unbiased methodology and our articles are not intended to be financial advice. It does not constitute a recommendation to buy or sell any stock, and does not take account of your objectives, or your financial situation. We aim to bring you long-term focused analysis driven by fundamental data. Note that our analysis may not factor in the latest price-sensitive company announcements or qualitative material. Simply Wall St has no position in any stocks mentioned.

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