Should You Buy, Sell or Hold Microsoft (MSFT) Stock at $386?

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By Joel South Published

Quick Read

  • Microsoft (MSFT) is a Hold at $386, with a 19% year-to-date decline despite earnings beats.

  • Azure’s 39% growth and $625 billion backlog support the bull case, though CapEx sustainability remains unclear.

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Should You Buy, Sell or Hold Microsoft (MSFT) Stock at $386?

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Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT | MSFT Price Prediction) is a Hold at $386. The stock has shed roughly 19% year-to-date while posting earnings beats, creating tension between deteriorating price action and accelerating AI fundamentals.

Microsoft operates across three segments: Productivity and Business Processes, Intelligent Cloud, and More Personal Computing. Cloud and AI have become dominant growth engines, with Microsoft Cloud surpassing $51.5 billion in quarterly revenue for the first time. The stock peaked near $552 before declining to current levels, sitting below both its 50-day moving average of $393.88 and its 200-day moving average of $474.17.

Azure Is Accelerating and the Backlog Is Enormous

The bull case rests on key metrics. Azure grew 39% year over year last quarter, with management guiding for 37% to 38% growth in the current quarter. Commercial remaining performance obligation reached $625 billion, up 110% year over year, signaling committed revenue that dwarfs most companies’ entire market caps. Microsoft 365 Copilot paid seats reached 15 million, up 160% year over year, and GitHub Copilot paid subscribers hit 4.7 million, up 75% year over year.

At $380, the stock trades at a forward P/E of 19x, well below peak levels. The analyst community remains overwhelmingly constructive, with 55 Buy or Strong Buy ratings against just 3 Holds and zero Sells. CEO Satya Nadella stated: “We are only at the beginning phases of AI diffusion and already Microsoft has built an AI business that is larger than some of our biggest franchises.”

CapEx Is Ballooning and Free Cash Flow Is Feeling It

The bear case centers on capital discipline. Capital expenditures nearly doubled year over year to $29.88 billion in a single quarter, and full-year free cash flow declined 3% in FY25 despite strong revenue growth. That divergence between earnings growth and cash generation raises questions about whether AI infrastructure spending will translate into margin expansion or merely revenue scale.

Post-earnings stock behavior reinforces skepticism. Despite a 8% EPS beat last quarter, the stock has fallen 15% since the filing date while the S&P 500 is down only 2%. Insider activity adds concern: seven senior executives, including the CFO, sold shares in a coordinated transaction at $392.74, above current price. No C-suite executive has purchased shares near current levels.

Strong Business, Murky Price Signal

The hold argument is straightforward. Microsoft’s fundamentals are excellent. Operating income grew 21% and operating cash flow rose 60% year over year. But the market has sold the stock through every beat, suggesting the issue is valuation expectations and CapEx trajectory, not business quality. Earnings are due in roughly 16 days, and that report will validate or challenge the CapEx-to-growth story.

What the Data Shows at This Price

Microsoft trades at a trailing P/E of 23x and a forward P/E of 19x on trailing twelve-month EPS of $15.98. Consensus analyst target sits at $587.31 across 58 analysts, implying substantial upside, though targets are directional opinions, not guarantees. The stock is down 19% year-to-date versus a broader market that has pulled back less severely. The 52-week low of $355.67 provides a reference for downside risk if sentiment deteriorates.

  • Strong Buy: 10
  • Buy: 45
  • Hold: 3
  • Sell: 0
  • Strong Sell: 0

At $386, Microsoft Is a Hold

The business compounds at a rate most large-cap companies cannot match, but the stock is being repriced lower through every earnings cycle. This signals a valuation reset, not fundamental breakdown. Paying a premium for that reset before completion is the wrong move.

The upcoming earnings report is the key trigger. If Microsoft delivers another Azure beat above 37% to 38% and shows CapEx moderation or improved free cash flow conversion, the stock has a credible path toward re-rating higher. If CapEx accelerates again with no corresponding Azure guidance improvement, downside toward the 52-week low of $355.67 becomes more realistic.

Investors holding the stock own a quality business. The AI monetization flywheel, $625 billion backlog, and Copilot adoption trajectory are substantial. But new buyers at $386 step in front of an earnings event with unresolved capital efficiency questions. Patience eliminates that risk for free. The upcoming print, the CapEx line, and free cash flow conversion will be the key data points to watch.

Photo of Joel South
About the Author Joel South →

Joel South covers large-cap stocks, dividend investing, and major market trends, with a focus on earnings analysis, valuation, and turning complex data into actionable insights for investors.

He brings more than 15 years of experience as an investor and financial journalist, including 12 years at The Motley Fool, where he served as an investment analyst, Bureau Chief, and later led the Fool.com investing news desk. He has also co-hosted an investing podcast and appeared across TV and radio discussing market trends.

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