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Bank of America sends strong verdict on Microsoft stock

Microsoft has been one of the worst-performing large-cap tech stocks of 2026, down about 20% year to date, even as the company keeps expanding its AI business and growing Azure at a pace most cloud companies would envy.

A lot of investors have been sitting on their hands, waiting either for a reason to get back in or a reason to stay patient.

Bank of America just gave them something to chew on.

The bank reiterated its Buy rating and $500 price objective ahead of Microsoft's fiscal fourth-quarter earnings on July 29, updating its estimates to reflect stronger Azure growth expectations. But the note isn't just a target confirmation. It lays out what the bank thinks investors need to see from the print, and what happens to the stock if they don't get it.

What Bank of America says about Azure and Microsoft Q4 earnings

Azure is the number that matters most on July 29. Microsoft guided for Azure revenue growth of 39% to 40% year over year in constant currency during the quarter, and Bank of America says hitting or beating that range is critical.

The bank was direct about the stakes: Azure at or above the guided range is what the stock needs to work. A miss, it said, could intensify investor concerns about the return on Microsoft's AI infrastructure spending.

One reason for optimism heading in is capacity. Demand has been outpacing Azure's available computing infrastructure for several quarters, capping how much contracted revenue the company can convert and recognize. That dynamic is starting to improve.

Microsoft's first Fairwater data center facility in Wisconsin is now fully operational, which could help the company start converting more of its massive backlog into revenue, Invezz reported.

More Microsoft:

That backlog stood at $627 billion at the end of Q3, representing contracted revenue not yet recognized. Management expects about 25% of that to convert into revenue over the next 12 months. For investors, strong conversion would be another sign that enterprise AI spending is moving from commitment to actual financial results.

The Microsoft AI capex surge and what it means for free cash flow

The pressure from AI spending shows up most visibly in free cash flow. Bank of America estimates Q4 capital expenditures at roughly $42 billion, which will compress free cash flow sharply compared to a year earlier. Investors have generally accepted higher spending as necessary to compete in AI infrastructure, but patience for that trade-off isn't unlimited, Motley Fool reported.

 The stock's underperformance has pushed the valuation to a level Bank of America considers attractive Craig/Getty Images
The stock's underperformance has pushed the valuation to a level Bank of America considers attractive Craig/Getty Images

This is why Bank of America is so explicit about the Azure bar. If revenue growth comes in at or above guidance, the spending looks justified. If Azure misses, the market will start questioning whether the investment is generating proportional returns. As TheStreet reported, Citi also flagged that investors will be watching management's fiscal 2027 guidance on operating margins, which is expected to be cautious heading into another heavy spending year.

Copilot adoption and Microsoft AI monetization as proof points

Bank of America also wants to see continued Copilot progress.

The AI productivity tool ended Q3 with 20 million paid seats and Microsoft's AI annual recurring revenue has hit $37 billion. The bank expects both figures to keep climbing as Azure capacity expands and enterprise deployments broaden.

The opportunity behind those numbers is significant. Microsoft has roughly 400 million M365 licenses deployed across enterprise customers, all of them potential Copilot upgrade candidates, Motley Fool noted.

Unlike AI-native startups that have to find customers from scratch, Microsoft can sell directly into an installed base that already depends on its software. Bank of America is also watching the company's shift toward consumption-based AI pricing alongside traditional seat fees, which could expand average revenue per user over time.

Where Microsoft stock stands and what the valuation says

The stock's underperformance has pushed the valuation to a level Bank of America considers attractive. Microsoft is trading at roughly 19 times the bank's calendar 2027 earnings forecast, well below its five-year average multiple of 29 times. The bank's read is that the discount reflects near-term capex anxiety, not a fundamental problem with the business.

About 95% of analysts covering Microsoft have a Buy rating, with a median price target of $550, well above Bank of America's $500 target. Core businesses in cloud and productivity continue to provide stability, while the only notable drag is gaming, which has been weak throughout the year.

July 29 is when investors find out whether the Azure growth thesis is on track, whether Copilot is building real monetization, and what management says about fiscal 2027. Bank of America is staying Buy heading in. The note makes clear the print needs to deliver.

Related: Citi revamps Microsoft stock price target for the rest of 2026

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This story was originally published July 18, 2026 at 12:13 PM.

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