Here's why I think Microsoft represents the best risk - reward dynamic among big tech companies
We all know how Microsoft has been trading at its lowest forward PE ratio levels in several years, we see posts about that on this sub all the time. I think this is a fast narrowing window which will no longer exist when the company releases its Q4 earnings, at the end of this month.
As mentioned in the title, I believe the risk reward is unusually asymmetric right now.
The bear case is already in the price. The market has been discounting Microsoft for months over the $31.9 billion in quarterly CapEx, compressed free cash flow, and uncertainty over whether all this infrastructure spend actually converts into revenue at the pace management is claiming. I get that skepticism, and I would say it is mostly legitimate. Most critically, I think it's already reflected in the multiple.
But I believe that one good quarter will change this.
Microsoft's AI business crossed $37 billion ARR growing at 123% year over year. Microsoft 365 Copilot just crossed 20 million paid seats growing at 250% year over year. Azure added a full gigawatt of new capacity this quarter alone and is on track to double its footprint in two years.
If Q4 shows Azure revenue acceleration, Copilot seat momentum continuing, and any early sign that free cash flow is recovering as revenue scales against fixed infrastructure costs, and the narrative flips. The CapEx overhang will then be framed as a moat that nobody can replicate.
What happens if this does not play out in Q4? Probably nothing, and the stock will stay flat because the multiple is already compressed, and I dont see much air left to come out.
The upside if Q4 delivers is a significant re-rating from a market that has been waiting for proof that the investment cycle is self-funding.
So the dynamics seem exceedingly tilted to favor those long on Microsoft. I think this much is very clear to institutional investors. Keep in mind the stock has a consensus price target of abuot $560. (Citigroup says $620, Deutsche Bank says $550, Wells Fargo says $625)
For anyone interested, I'm following the Microsoft thesis into its next earnings, and made what I think is the most comprehensive thesis tracker on the stock, on my substack, where I'm tracking 25 milestones built around the thesis management is trying to convey about the company. It has ADD, HOLD, and CUT framework with named trip wires (not vague rules), a long-term roadmap of what Microsoft is actually building toward.
Free to read for anyone interested. [https://open.substack.com/pub/earningintel/p/comprehensive-microsoft-thesis-tracker?r=7aqnn4&utm\_campaign=post-expanded-share&utm\_medium=post%20viewer](https://open.substack.com/pub/earningintel/p/comprehensive-microsoft-thesis-tracker?r=7aqnn4&utm_campaign=post-expanded-share&utm_medium=post%20viewer)