Microsoft shares clawed back nearly 6% on Friday to close at €327.90, pulling away from a 52-week low set just days earlier. The relief rally offers a pause in a painful first half that wiped out almost a quarter of the stock’s value, but the path ahead is cluttered with conflicting signals from both the product cycle and the regulatory landscape.
The tech giant has extended the life of Windows 10 by another year, pushing the end of Extended Security Updates to October 2027 for home users on version 22H2. Existing subscribers are automatically covered, while new joiners can enroll via PC settings, 1,000 Microsoft Rewards points, or a one-time fee of $30 for up to ten devices. Microsoft frames the move as a transition aid, giving customers more time to move to Windows 11 hardware. Yet for investors, the logic cuts deeper: a longer Windows 10 tail removes urgency from the PC refresh cycle, dampening demand for the Copilot+ devices and Windows 365 subscriptions that underpin the company’s growth thesis.
That pressure is now compounded by a regulatory threat to Microsoft’s most important growth engine. The European Commission has signaled its intent to classify Azure as a gatekeeper under the Digital Markets Act. Although Microsoft does not meet the law’s revenue thresholds, the Commission argues that Azure’s strong market position and high switching costs for enterprise users warrant the designation. The move would impose stricter interoperability and data portability obligations on the second-largest cloud platform in the EU. Amazon Web Services is facing a parallel review. Both companies have the right to respond before a final decision.
Should investors sell immediately? Or is it worth buying Microsoft?
While regulators tighten the screws, Microsoft is pouring billions into the infrastructure needed to keep pace with demand. A new data center campus in Pecos, Texas, will add two gigawatts of global capacity over the next several years, requiring a multi-billion-dollar outlay. The payoff so far looks solid: in the third fiscal quarter of 2026, total revenue hit $82.9 billion, up 18% year over year. Operating income rose 20% to $38.4 billion. Cloud revenue expanded 29% to $54.5 billion, with Azure itself growing at a blistering 40%. The flip side is margin pressure — gross margin in the cloud business slipped to 66% under the weight of massive artificial intelligence investments. Shareholders still received roughly $10.2 billion in dividends and buybacks during the quarter.
The stock’s technical picture remains fragile. Friday’s close at €327.90 is about 31% below the 52-week high of €478.10 from October 2025 and down nearly 19% year to date. The shares trade below both the 50-day moving average of €352.96 and the 200-day average of €383.98. The relative strength index of 43 suggests neither oversold conditions nor a clear recovery signal. The 52-week low of €307.10, set on June 25, sits just 7% below the current price.
Investors now face a short trading week in the US, with markets closed Friday for Independence Day. Critical data arrives early: consumer confidence and job openings Tuesday, followed by the official employment report Thursday. Those releases will heavily influence whether the tech sector’s tentative rebound can hold. Microsoft’s own quarterly report for the fourth fiscal quarter will provide the next hard numbers on cloud growth, AI monetization, and margin trends — the data points that ultimately matter more than an extended Windows 10 support window or a regulatory notice.
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