Microsoft Lags as Wall Street Bets on AI Bounce

Microsoft Lags as Wall Street Bets on AI Bounce

June 8, 2026

New York, June 8, 2026, 15:08 (EDT)

Microsoft shares slipped around 1% Monday afternoon, lagging behind a bounce in tech stocks. The software giant traded at $412.60, off $4.07, and moved between $408.60 and $416.99, making it one of the session’s underperformers.

Microsoft is still a top way for Wall Street to bet on AI. Azure keeps showing strong growth, but investors are looking for signs the big bills for chips and data centers will start to deliver returns. Tech shares jumped Monday, with the S&P 500 tech sector gaining 1.8%, and the Philadelphia Semiconductor Index up 6.2%, according to Reuters. Rick Meckler at Cherry Lane Investments called it “bargain hunting” after Friday’s drop, though he said the market had been “priced for perfection” despite “imperfect times.” Reuters

Microsoft lagged earlier in the session too. MarketWatch said the stock dropped $7.73, cutting about 48 points from the Dow, since the price-weighted index reacts more to higher-priced names.

Microsoft’s fiscal third quarter numbers still give bulls talking points. In late April, the company reported Azure and other cloud services revenue was up 40%, Microsoft Cloud revenue increased 29%, and AI business hit a $37 billion annual run rate. CEO Satya Nadella said Microsoft was focused on “cloud and AI infrastructure.” CFO Amy Hood pointed to “growing demand for the Microsoft Cloud.” Microsoft

Azure tends to be the first thing investors focus on. It’s Microsoft’s service for companies that want to rent computing power, storage and software, instead of managing the hardware themselves. That business gives a clear window into what corporate customers are doing with AI.

Microsoft’s approach to AI drew new scrutiny after fresh comments from Mustafa Suleyman, CEO of Microsoft AI. Suleyman told The Verge in a Monday interview that changes in Microsoft’s agreement with OpenAI let the company work on superintelligence on its own, while still licensing models from other companies. “Microsoft cannot be structurally dependent on a third party forever,” he said. The Verge

The stock faces a double-edged situation here. Pushing for more self-sufficiency could mean less need for OpenAI down the line. But it also signals bigger spending, higher engineering risks and a longer path before investors find out what kind of profit the new AI stack might deliver.

Peers traded mixed. Nvidia gained 1.9% with chip stocks bouncing. Alphabet slipped 1.2% and Amazon dropped 0.6%. Both Alphabet and Amazon operate major cloud platforms and are investing big in AI infrastructure.

Nasdaq lost over 4% on Friday and chip shares slumped 10%, according to Reuters Open Interest. Strong jobs numbers sent investors bracing for higher rates. Higher rates can pressure growth stocks, since profits expected in the future are worth less as borrowing costs rise.

Making a full bearish call here is tough. Azure demand could keep beating the pace of supply, and Microsoft might convert today’s heavy capex — money going into data centers, networking kit, and AI chips — into steady, fat-margin sales down the line. There’s a clear risk, though: if spending grows faster than revenue or customers wait longer to pay for AI tools, or if lower-cost rivals undercut prices, it could hit the bottom line. Microsoft has warned investors in SEC filings about execution and competition risks tied to cloud and AI, and said big investments could fall short of goals.

Right now, the tape isn’t calling the end of AI. It’s showing that investors are picking through the AI trade, not snapping up everything with an AI label. Microsoft is part of that. Even with its size and cloud growth, it’s still being tested by the market.

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