Microsoft’s new fiscal year began on July 1 with a familiar ritual — job cuts — but this time the headcount reductions are unfolding against a backdrop of legal headaches, a critical security vulnerability, and a wholesale rethinking of the Xbox business that has left investors jittery.
The company is shedding thousands of roles across sales, consulting, and gaming. The July cull follows last year’s reduction of roughly 9,000 employees, though the current wave is expected to be smaller. A voluntary buyout program had already thinned the ranks, with about 3,000 eligible US workers — those meeting specific age and tenure requirements — opting to leave. Microsoft’s total headcount stands at around 228,000.
The gaming division is absorbing a disproportionate share of the cuts. Xbox chief Asha Sharma has called for a fundamental reboot, acknowledging that the current model isn’t working. Over the past five years, the division burned through nearly $20 billion on content, platforms, and hardware subsidies, yet annual revenue has contracted by almost half a billion dollars over that same stretch. The message from Redmond is clear: belt-tightening is no longer optional.
That recalibration is already hitting external partners. IO Interactive confirmed layoffs after Microsoft withdrew support for “Project Fantasy,” though the studio plans to soldier on independently. Fears that Obsidian Entertainment might be shuttered were quickly dismissed — the studio is safe for now. Meanwhile, Microsoft is taking a hard look at its crown-jewel franchise, Halo. “Halo: Campaign Evolved” remains on track for a July 28 multiplatform release, but the broader investment priorities across all first-party studios are being re-examined.
Beyond the gaming turmoil, Microsoft faces a security headache. A vulnerability in Microsoft Defender, tracked as CVE-2026-50656 and dubbed “RoguePlanet,” exploits a race condition to enable local privilege escalation. Both Windows 10 and Windows 11 are affected. Microsoft has confirmed the flaw but has yet to ship a patch. The researcher behind the disclosure, Nightmare-Eclipse, has highlighted a hole that leaves corporate and consumer systems exposed.
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Legal challenges are piling up on multiple fronts. A class-action suit filed in the Western District of Washington (case 26-cv-02071) accuses Microsoft of misleading investors about the functionality and integration of Azure and its Copilot AI tools. The alleged misrepresentations triggered a sharp stock drop on January 28, 2026, when shares tumbled from $481.63 to $433.50. Investors have until August 11 to apply for lead plaintiff status. The case adds fuel to an intensifying debate over whether AI products are delivering the business results that tech companies have promised shareholders.
A separate class-action lawsuit, filed on July 1 in the Eastern District of Wisconsin, brings an entirely different kind of grievance. More than 1,000 households within 1.5 miles of Microsoft’s Fairwater data center in Mount Pleasant are complaining about noise from the facility’s cooling fans.
The stock market has taken note. Microsoft shares fell 0.89% on Friday to €338.25, nearly 30% below their October 2025 all-time high. The stock is trading below its 50-day moving average of €350.30 and far beneath its 200-day average of €381.46. The relative strength index is at 49.5, a neutral reading. As of the latest check, the shares have nudged up to €341.30, but they remain closer to the 52-week low of €307.10, set on June 25, than to any recent peak. Over the past twelve months, the stock has shed 19.52% of its value, with annualized volatility clocking in at 40.63%.
With the lead plaintiff deadline of August 11 approaching and no patch yet for the Defender flaw, Microsoft’s start to fiscal 2027 is anything but quiet. The company is under intense pressure to demonstrate that its massive AI investments — part of a $700 billion industry-wide spending spree by tech giants this year — will eventually pay off, even as it slashes costs almost everywhere else.
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