Skip to main content

software selloff

1 article found

MSFT Analysis: Microsoft's 29% Pullback Meets Best-in-Class Margins — Why the SaaSpocalypse May Be a Gift for Long-Term Investors

Microsoft shares have been caught in the crossfire of a broader software sector selloff that some analysts are calling the "SaaSpocalypse" — a violent repricing of cloud and SaaS valuations that has dragged even the strongest names into correction territory. At $392.74, Microsoft trades 29% below its 52-week high of $555.45, erasing roughly $1.2 trillion in market capitalization from the peak. The decline has pushed the trailing P/E ratio to 24.6x, a level not seen since before the generative AI rally began in late 2022. Yet underneath the surface-level pain, the fundamental story has arguably never been stronger. Microsoft just posted its most profitable quarter in history — $81.3 billion in revenue and $38.5 billion in net income for FQ2 2026 — while maintaining a 47.1% operating margin despite committing a staggering 36.8% of revenue to capital expenditures for AI infrastructure. That combination of peak profitability and peak investment spending is nearly unprecedented among mega-cap technology companies. The market's anxiety centers on two questions: Can Microsoft earn an adequate return on its massive AI capex cycle? And does a 24.6x P/E offer sufficient margin of safety if growth disappoints? With Dan Ives of Wedbush calling the software selloff "near a bottom" and Peter Thiel notably trimming his MSFT position, the bull and bear cases are colliding in real time. This analysis digs into the numbers to determine whether the pullback represents a rare entry point or a justified de-rating.

MSFTMicrosoft stock analysisAzure growth