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Microsoft Stock Slips Before Open as $190 Billion AI Bet Faces Wall Street Test
12 July 2026
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Microsoft Stock Forecast: Three Target Cuts Slice 10% Off — Yet Still Point to 33% Upside

New York, July 12, 2026, 14:45 (EDT)

Microsoft heads into Monday after Argus Research cut its price target on Friday to $510 from $620, the sharpest of three reductions issued last week. Together with cuts from BMO Capital and Wolfe Research, the new targets average $511.67 — about 10% below their prior average, yet still 32.9% above Microsoft’s $385.10 Friday close. All three firms kept positive ratings.

That matters because the shares moved against a rising market. From the July 2 pre-holiday close through Friday, Microsoft lost 1.4%, while the Nasdaq gained 1.7% last week. Fiscal 2027 earnings estimates barely moved: the consensus remains $19.44 a share, against $19.45 a month ago. At Friday’s close, Microsoft traded at 19.8 times that forecast — a forward price-to-earnings ratio, meaning the price investors pay for each dollar of expected profit. The broader average target is $557.74, with a published low of $400.

Recent callRatingPrior targetNew targetUpside from $385.10
Argus Research — Joseph Bonner, July 10Buy$620$51032.4%
BMO Capital — Keith Bachman, July 7Buy$515$50029.8%
Wolfe Research — Alex Zukin, July 6Outperform$570$52536.3%
Three-call average$568.33$511.6732.9%

The arithmetic changes the tone. The fresh average sits about $46 below the wider analyst consensus and $56.67 below the firms’ own previous average. To reach $511.67 without a higher earnings forecast, Microsoft’s forward multiple would have to expand to 26.3 times from 19.8. This is now a valuation-recovery call, not simply an earnings-growth call.

Microsoft’s operating case remains strong enough to keep the ratings intact. Azure revenue rose 40% in the March quarter, and the company guided to 39%-40% growth in constant currency — which removes exchange-rate effects — for the June quarter. At the same time, it signaled roughly $40 billion of quarterly capital expenditure, or capex, meaning spending on data centers, chips and other long-lived assets, and about $190 billion for calendar 2026. Chief Financial Officer Amy Hood said: “We remain confident in the return on these investments given higher demand signals and increasing product usage.” Reuters

Competitive numbers give both sides ammunition. In the latest reported quarter, Microsoft’s Azure and other cloud services grew 40%, Alphabet’s Google Cloud expanded 63%, and Amazon’s AWS increased 28%. Microsoft nevertheless traded at a lower trailing earnings multiple than either rival on Friday.

CompanyCloud measureLatest annual growthFriday closeTrailing P/E
Microsoft Azure and other cloud services40%$385.1022.9x
Alphabet Google Cloud63%$357.1827.2x
Amazon AWS28%$245.3429.3x

The figures are not fully comparable. Alphabet carries a large advertising business, while Amazon combines cloud computing with lower-margin retail. Still, Microsoft’s relative discount shows investors are not paying a premium merely because Azure is growing near 40%. Cash conversion has become the test.

But the risk case is no longer about weak demand alone: Wolfe’s model puts fiscal 2027 capex at $270 billion and free cash flow — cash left after capital spending — at negative $17.4 billion. Jefferies strategist Chris Wood called AI “the mother of all cycles” and said the four largest U.S. hyperscalers, the biggest cloud and data-center operators, have lifted projected capex to 92% of operating cash flow, with $662 billion of future data-center lease commitments not yet carried as ordinary balance-sheet debt. If those costs arrive before the revenue, Microsoft’s multiple can stay compressed even with Azure near 40%. The Economic Times

With the U.S. stock market closed on Sunday, the first test next week is macroeconomic. June consumer inflation data arrives Tuesday, producer prices on Wednesday and retail sales on Thursday; hotter inflation could raise interest-rate expectations and pressure stocks valued heavily on future profits. “It just seems like a lot of factors coming to a head all at once,” said Michael Reynolds, vice president of investment strategy at Glenmede. Reuters

Microsoft’s direct test comes after the market closes on July 29, when it reports fiscal fourth-quarter results. The company scheduled its earnings call for 2:30 p.m. Pacific time. Investors will focus on whether Azure meets the 39%-40% guide, whether quarterly capex stays near $40 billion, and what management signals about fiscal 2027 spending.

The forecast is therefore two-stage. For the coming week, inflation data and the broader AI trade may dominate; over 12 months, about $512 is the fresher analyst benchmark, while the $400 published low target marks a nearly flat-return stress case and the $558 broad average requires a 28.7-times fiscal 2027 P/E. A sustained move toward $500 needs Azure to meet its guide and management to contain the cash-flow drag; without that evidence, the current 19.8-times multiple can hold.

Iwona Majkowska is a financial markets journalist at TS2.tech, specializing in stocks, artificial intelligence and technology. A graduate of the Warsaw School of Economics, she previously worked in equity research and financial analysis before focusing on market reporting. Her daily coverage helps investors follow major developments across U.S. and global markets.

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