Key Takeaways
- Bernstein maintains Outperform rating with $641 price target for Microsoft (MSFT)
- Shares have declined 27.5% in six months, trading near 52-week low at $370.87
- Firm views Azure margin compression as temporary, linked to gap between AI infrastructure investment and revenue generation
- Acceleration in Azure growth anticipated for Q3 with sustained momentum through Q4
- Strong Buy consensus from Wall Street analysts with average target of $581.61
Microsoft’s shares have endured significant pressure in recent months, plunging 27.5% to reach $370.87. The stock now hovers near its lowest point in the past year. Despite this downturn, Bernstein maintains its optimistic outlook.
Bernstein analyst Mark Moerdler has reaffirmed his Outperform rating alongside a $641 price objective for MSFT — representing potential gains exceeding 70% from current trading levels.
The foundation of Bernstein’s thesis centers on timing dynamics. Microsoft is making substantial investments in artificial intelligence infrastructure, creating concern among some market participants. However, Moerdler contends the capital deployment strategy is being misunderstood.
The firm believes the majority of this capital expenditure flows into capacity that begins producing revenue within a six-month window from deployment. This temporal disconnect between investment and returns is creating misleading optics in current financial metrics.
Bernstein analyzed five potential destinations for Microsoft’s capital spending: proprietary applications, complimentary Copilot access, internal infrastructure, lower-margin Azure AI services, and offline capacity awaiting activation. Their analysis reveals a more advantageous allocation than market sentiment suggests.
A substantial portion of the investment targets higher-margin segments, especially Microsoft’s proprietary software and AI solutions. Copilot, specifically, is generating SaaS-like AI revenue with attractive margins after transitioning to a paid subscription model.
Temporary Azure Margin Headwinds Expected to Reverse
Azure’s margin profile has experienced compression, which Bernstein openly recognizes. The firm attributes this to nascent AI workloads carrying thinner margins compared to conventional cloud offerings.
As these workloads evolve and achieve scale, Bernstein anticipates margin improvement. The current pressure reflects Azure’s position in its AI expansion phase rather than indicating a fundamental issue.
Research and development expenditure as a proportion of total revenue has remained essentially stable. Bernstein cites this as evidence that Microsoft maintains fiscal discipline despite heavy investments.
Microsoft delivered 16.7% revenue expansion over the trailing twelve months. The stock carries a P/E multiple of 23.26, with a PEG ratio of 0.8 — metrics that both Bernstein and InvestingPro identify as indicating undervaluation at present price levels.
Second Half Azure Acceleration Forecast
Bernstein projects Azure growth will strengthen in Q3, maintaining positive trajectory into Q4. This forecast directly correlates with previously funded capacity beginning operations.
Microsoft is simultaneously pursuing an independent initiative — creating proprietary large-scale AI models by 2027 to serve as alternatives to solutions from OpenAI and Anthropic.
UBS recently confirmed its Buy rating on Chevron following an electricity generation partnership with Microsoft. The collaboration involves constructing natural gas facilities in Texas dedicated to powering Microsoft’s AI data center operations.
Across the analyst community, 34 of 37 Wall Street professionals who issued ratings on MSFT during the past three months recommended Buy. The consensus price target stands at $581.61, suggesting 56% appreciation potential from present levels.
