Key Highlights
- Citi affirms “Buy” rating on MSFT, highlighting AI acceleration and robust cloud performance
- Q2 revenue reached $81.3B with 17% YoY growth; net income surged 60% to $38.5B
- Azure revenue jumped 39% YoY; Microsoft 365 Copilot paid users reached 15 million, up 160% YoY
- Goldman Sachs maintains Buy rating with $600 target following Maia 200 chip advancements
- Analyst consensus shows 41 of 50 rate MSFT “Strong Buy” with average target of $595.60
Wall Street analysts continue showing strong confidence in Microsoft (MSFT), with both Citi and Goldman Sachs confirming their Buy ratings on the technology giant in recent weeks.
Shares of MSFT trade near $397, representing approximately a 30% decline from peak levels, while maintaining a market capitalization of $2.9 trillion.
Tyler Radke from Citi maintained his Buy rating following discussions with Microsoft’s investor relations division. His analysis concentrated on AI competitive dynamics, cloud infrastructure capacity, and capital allocation strategy.
Microsoft delivered December quarter revenue of $81.3 billion, representing 17% growth year-over-year. Net income approached double the prior-year figure at $38.5 billion — reflecting 60% expansion.
The cloud segment delivered exceptional performance. Microsoft’s cloud operations surpassed $50 billion in quarterly revenue for the first time, posting 26% year-over-year growth.
Azure powered this momentum with 39% expansion during the quarter. Customer demand presently exceeds available supply, though Microsoft has outlined strategies to address this imbalance.
One key element involves proprietary silicon. The Maia 200 AI inference accelerator provides over 30% better cost efficiency versus its predecessor, CEO Satya Nadella reported.
Goldman Highlights Maia 200 Progress
Gabriela Borges from Goldman Sachs maintained her Buy rating alongside a $600 price target following Microsoft’s January announcement of the Maia 200.
Prior to this development, Maia lacked comprehensive benchmark results and was perceived as lagging behind competing chips. Goldman now indicates performance levels are comparable to Amazon’s Trainium and Google’s TPUs regarding raw computational power.
Goldman identified this as beneficial for Microsoft’s price-performance metrics on AI computing and the company’s potential to eventually achieve CPU-level Azure gross margins on AI-driven workloads. Microsoft currently operates with a 69% gross profit margin and 34% return on equity.
The analysis acknowledged certain constraints — including incomplete production performance metrics and the requirement to expand the software infrastructure supporting Maia.
Copilot Adoption and GitHub Momentum
Microsoft 365 Copilot achieved record seat additions, climbing more than 160% year-over-year. The platform currently serves 15 million paid seats, with Radke identifying it as an emerging growth catalyst for Microsoft’s enterprise software operations.
GitHub Copilot has reached 4.7 million paid subscribers, reflecting 75% year-over-year growth.
Dragon Copilot, deployed in medical environments, processes documentation for 21 million patient encounters quarterly.
More than 80% of Fortune 500 organizations have deployed active AI agents using Microsoft’s platform.
Among 50 analysts tracking MSFT, 41 assign a “Strong Buy” rating, four recommend “Moderate Buy,” and five suggest “Hold.” The average price target stands at $595.60.
Analyst forecasts anticipate Microsoft revenue expanding from $281.72 billion in fiscal 2025 to $591 billion by fiscal 2030, while earnings per share are expected to climb from $13.64 to $31.84 during this timeframe.

