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YES! ANOTHER MSFT POST.
But a different discussion...
There is a lot of focus in this forum on whether MSFT is over-valued and under-valued.
I present a view on what it will take for MSFT to rebound:
**1. The OpenAI/Musk lawsuit needs to go**
Score one for Microsoft.
The federal jury dismissed all of Musk's claims against OpenAI and Microsoft on May 18, throwing out the suit on statute of limitations grounds after less than two hours of deliberation. Although, the dismissal came on a technicality, not the merits, and Musk's attorney has already said they plan to appeal.
So a tail risk remains, but the headline overhang that was spooking investors is gone. MSFT share is no longer going to be diluted in favor of Elon.
**2. Copilot needs to win enterprise despite...being an average product**
Microsoft 365 Copilot hit 20 million paid enterprise seats as of Q3 FY26, up from 15 million in January 2026, a 33% jump in a single quarter. Against a base of roughly 450 to 477 million total M365 seats, that is about 4.2 to 4.4% penetration. Small, yes but the potential is large given how much data lives natively in OneDrive/365.
But whether the product improves or not (btw, Satya is leading product design himself now), the go-to-market is getting more aggressive. The new E7 tier launching May 2026 at $99 per user per month bundles Copilot directly into the base SKU alongside E5 and Agent 365, so it is no longer an add-on that procurement teams can easily cut.
Not well noticed but think MSFT is also pushing its partners to show up, Accenture alone signed on for over 740,000 seats, E&Y is next with atleast 150k seats. I am sure Satya will calling up those CEOs himself who are beneficiary of large consulting contracts from MSFT.
**3. MAIA has to change the game...as much it can**
Google's TPU program is the most mature custom silicon effort in the industry, and for Google Cloud customers it increasingly represents the most cost-effective path for large-scale training and inference.
Microsoft launched Maia 200 in January 2026 and the benchmarks look decent on paper, the deeper issue is that Microsoft is still fundamentally an NVIDIA shop. Nvidia holds 80 to 85% of the data center AI accelerator market, and its CUDA software moat is what actually keeps workloads locked in. Competing hardware can close the raw performance gap, but developer mindshare and library maturity keep everything running on NVIDIA anyway.
Maia is handling/will handle inference workloads on Azure. Training, the expensive part, still runs on NVIDIA. Google built its TPU stack from the ground up for both, which is why their integration and cost efficiency at scale is in a different league.
Though Microsoft will keep improving Maia, it just cannot unbolt itself from the NVIDIA ecosystem overnight, and that is a structural ceiling on how efficient their AI infrastructure can ever get.
**4. The rotation to value will happen if inflation doesn't get in the way**
AI hardware and memory stocks are still where capital is chasing heat. When that cycle matures, as it always does, cash-flow-heavy compounders with massive installed bases get rediscovered. If MSFT keep addressing above 3 over-hangs, partially or totally, it will rebound if the interest rate environment stays steady.
Overall, expect MSFT to trade $50 higher in next 4 months, $200 higher in next 2 years. Goodluck to me...and to you.