Microsoft stock today: MSFT steadies in premarket as downgrades keep AI spending in focus

Microsoft stock today: MSFT steadies in premarket as downgrades keep AI spending in focus

February 11, 2026

New York, February 11, 2026, 08:34 EST — Premarket

  • Microsoft shares hovered mostly flat before the open following a new analyst downgrade.
  • Wall Street remains fixated on AI data-center spending and its impact on cash flow.
  • Investors will also be watching the U.S. January jobs report due out later Wednesday.

Shares of Microsoft Corporation slipped 0.1% in premarket trading Wednesday, hitting $413.27. The stock remains close to its recent lows as investors digest fresh Wall Street concerns about the company’s AI spending.

Melius Research downgraded Microsoft from “buy” to “hold,” setting a $430 price target. The firm cited rising AI-related capital expenditures and potential cash flow pressures, according to a Nasdaq.com report and Investing.com. Stifel analyst Brad Reback, who also cut his rating, called it “time for a break,” the report added. Nasdaq

Microsoft slipped slightly while U.S. stock futures edged up, anticipating the government’s January jobs report. This data often shifts expectations for Federal Reserve moves and, consequently, tech sector valuations.

Microsoft faces a tricky challenge: it’s writing big checks for data centers and AI chips now, but the revenue boost from those investments hasn’t arrived yet. This lag in timing is exactly what keeps triggering those downgrades.

On the January 28 earnings call, finance chief Amy Hood reported capital expenditures hitting $37.5 billion, with about two-thirds going toward short-lived assets like GPUs and CPUs for AI workloads. “Our customer demand continues to exceed our supply,” Hood noted. Free cash flow—the cash remaining after capex—came in at $5.9 billion, down from the previous quarter due to higher capital spending. CEO Satya Nadella urged investors to consider M365 Copilot alongside Azure when assessing returns on this investment. Microsoft

The key question remains: how much of this new capacity will actually generate paying cloud business, and how much will be gobbled up by Microsoft’s own AI products as margins tighten.

The stock’s reaction was sharp following the company’s late-January update, with Microsoft tumbling 10% in one day and wiping out over $350 billion in market value as investors pushed for clearer AI returns, Reuters reported.

The competitive stakes are high. Analysts often cite Alphabet’s Google and Amazon as benchmarks, highlighting how fast AI infrastructure investments translate into revenue that fuels the next surge in capital expenditure.

The downside is clear. If enterprise spending slows or AI tool returns take longer to materialize than investors anticipate, cash-flow strain will become tougher to ignore. On top of that, a stronger jobs report driving bond yields up could hit software stocks sensitive to interest rates.

Coming next: Wednesday’s U.S. January jobs report. Investors will be watching closely to see if it alters the rate outlook that’s been rattling megacap tech stocks like Microsoft heading into the next session.

Artur Ślesik

Artur Ślesik is a technology and financial markets journalist at Bez-kabli.pl, covering artificial intelligence, semiconductors, technology stocks and emerging innovations. A graduate of Warsaw University of Technology, he combines a technical background with market analysis to explain how new technologies are shaping industries, businesses and investment trends worldwide.

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