Today: 1 June 2026
Microsoft Shares Surge 5.4%, Wall Street Watching for AI Payoff
1 June 2026
2 mins read

Microsoft Shares Surge 5.4%, Wall Street Watching for AI Payoff

NEW YORK, June 1, 2026, 04:13 EDT

  • Microsoft finished Friday at $450.24, rising 5.45%. AI stocks lifted Wall Street indexes to record closes.
  • Nasdaq’s regular U.S. trading starts at 9:30 a.m. ET. June 1 isn’t shown as a 2026 market holiday on the Nasdaq schedule.
  • The next thing to watch is if investors keep backing Microsoft’s AI spending while cloud demand climbs and costs go higher.

Microsoft stock picked up speed going into June after jumping Friday. The move came as buyers returned to AI-related tech names, and Wall Street’s main indexes closed at new highs.

The stock finished Friday at $450.24, up 5.45%. Volume was 77.3 million shares. In after-hours trading, it last changed hands at $449.99, nearly flat from the close.

Why it matters now: Microsoft’s move came with investors once again viewing AI spending as a driver of profit instead of just an expense. The Nasdaq Composite closed up 0.21% at 26,972.62 Friday. The S&P 500 rose 0.22%. The Dow was up 0.72%. The Nasdaq gained 2.39% this week.

“There’s definitely euphoric sentiment in the market around AI. The rally has really been driven by earnings,” Ohsung Kwon, chief equity strategist at Wells Fargo, told Reuters. Dell jumped 32.8% after boosting its full-year outlook, giving the sector another lift. Microsoft added 5.4%, Reuters reported. Reuters

Premarket trading on Nasdaq starts at 4:00 a.m. and goes until 9:30 a.m. Eastern, then regular hours pick up and last until 4:00 p.m. June 1 is not on Nasdaq’s 2026 holiday calendar.

Microsoft is back in the AI hardware mix, according to a weekend report. Axios, via Reuters, said Nvidia and Microsoft are set to roll out the first Windows PCs with Nvidia chips running as the main processor next week. The PCs will include Microsoft’s Surface line and models from Dell and others. The report also said Microsoft plans to show software for running AI agents directly on Windows machines.

Microsoft is still facing the main question with Azure, its cloud computing business. That business rents out computing and software over the internet, not on local servers. Back in April, Microsoft projected Azure and other cloud-services revenue would rise 39% to 40% in constant currency for the fiscal fourth quarter. That was ahead of the 36.7% from Visible Alpha, according to Reuters.

Microsoft’s latest figures gave bulls a lift. The company said fiscal third-quarter revenue rose 18% to $82.9 billion. Microsoft Cloud revenue climbed 29% to $54.5 billion. CEO Satya Nadella said its AI business topped a $37 billion annual run rate, pointing to the current sales pace annualized.

Morgan Stanley’s Keith Weiss stuck with his Overweight rating and $650 target on Microsoft, writing that the company is “deploying AI-specific capacity ahead of the associated monetization cycle,” TipRanks reported. Weiss’s call is simple: Microsoft is spending now, building up its data centers, and banking on revenue to come. TipRanks

AI spending hits Microsoft margins. The company reported its gross margin percentage fell, citing ongoing investment in AI infrastructure and higher AI product usage. Operating expenses also moved up, with Microsoft pointing to more R&D compute, AI talent and data costs.

Competition is heating up. Reuters said Google Cloud’s growth outpaced Azure in the latest period, though Google is smaller. Amazon now offers OpenAI’s new models and Codex coding tool on its cloud. That means Microsoft’s edge with OpenAI isn’t as exclusive as before.

Microsoft CFO Amy Hood said to analysts the company is “confident in the return” from its AI investments, citing rising demand and product use, according to Reuters. Next up is whether margins, capex, or signs of Copilot use outside initial corporate pilots live up to that. Reuters

Microsoft could drop some of Friday’s gains if the market goes defensive on Monday, or if yields and inflation push investors out of big tech names. A weaker rollout of AI products among large clients would also make the company’s $190 billion capital-spending plan tougher to justify, even with Microsoft’s strong balance sheet.

Right now, the stock isn’t acting like a typical software play. It’s trading on the question of whether AI infrastructure actually turns into high-margin software sales. That’s the risk here. The opening June session is set to test just how much patience still remains after Friday’s action.

Stock Market Today

  • Japan and South Korea Stocks Reach Record Highs Amid AI Boom and Iran Tensions; Oil Prices Surge
    June 1, 2026, 4:19 AM EDT. Japan's Nikkei 225 and South Korea's Kospi indexes hit all-time highs, driven by strong performances in technology-related stocks amid an ongoing artificial intelligence boom. SoftBank Group surged 14%, becoming Japan's most valuable company, while Samsung Electronics rose 10.1%. South Korea recorded a 53% year-on-year export increase in May, fueled by semiconductor demand. Meanwhile, oil prices rose over 3% amid escalating U.S.-Iran tensions and uncertainty around the Iran war ceasefire extension. Brent crude reached $93.95 a barrel, up from about $70 pre-war, as the U.S. conducted strikes on Iranian military sites following drone hostilities. Market volatility continues as geopolitical risks persist alongside robust corporate earnings and AI-driven growth.

Latest articles

Microsoft Shares Surge 5.4%, Wall Street Watching for AI Payoff

Microsoft Shares Surge 5.4%, Wall Street Watching for AI Payoff

1 June 2026
NEW YORK, June 1, 2026, 04:13 EDT Microsoft stock picked up speed going into June after jumping Friday. The move came as buyers returned to AI-related tech names, and Wall Street’s main indexes closed at new highs. The stock finished Friday at $450.24, up 5.45%. Volume was 77.3 million shares. In after-hours trading, it last changed hands at $449.99, nearly flat from the close. Why it matters now: Microsoft’s move came with investors once again viewing AI spending as a driver of profit instead of just an expense. The Nasdaq Composite closed up 0.21% at 26,972.62 Friday. The S&P 500
Wall Street Feels the Heat (and Thrill): Fed Cuts, Tariffs & Mega-Mergers Set NYSE Buzz

US Stock Market Today: Live Updates 01.06.2026

1 June 2026
Keller Group (LSE: KLR) reports strong 2026 trading, driven by U.S. mega projects in data centres and chip plants amid the AI construction surge. The company holds a net cash position of £60 million, a 30.7% return on capital employed, and a 3.2% dividend yield with annual payouts since 1994. Shares trade at a P/E of 10.2, highlighting possible undervaluation, but recession risks remain significant.
Salesforce Stock Bounces, Eyes Turn to This Week’s Next Test

Salesforce Stock Bounces, Eyes Turn to This Week’s Next Test

1 June 2026
Salesforce stock jumped 8.47% to $191.10 Friday after beating Q1 revenue and adjusted earnings forecasts, but Q2 revenue guidance missed analyst targets. Annual recurring revenue for Agentforce soared 205% to $1.2 billion. Bookings and cRPO missed Wall Street estimates for a second straight quarter. Shares remain down 27.7% for the year. Investors await more detail on Agentforce and big-deal momentum at tech conferences next week.
Wall Street Feels the Heat (and Thrill): Fed Cuts, Tariffs & Mega-Mergers Set NYSE Buzz
Previous Story

US Stock Market Today: Live Updates 01.06.2026

Go toTop