Key Highlights
- MSFT reported Q3 earnings per share of $4.27, surpassing the $4.05 consensus, with total revenue reaching $82.9 billion
- Azure cloud platform delivered 40% year-over-year revenue expansion, exceeding the 37.9% analyst forecast
- Capital expenditure jumped 49% to $31.9 billion; free cash flow declined 22% to $15.8 billion
- M365 Copilot paid seats climbed past 20 million, growing from 15 million in the previous quarter
- Management projects Q4 Azure growth between 39–40%, outpacing the Street’s 36.8% projection
Microsoft reported fiscal Q3 results that exceeded expectations across revenue and earnings metrics. Azure emerged as the standout performer.
The cloud platform achieved 40% year-over-year revenue growth, surpassing analyst predictions of 37.9%. This metric carries significant weight among investors tracking Microsoft’s progress converting AI infrastructure investments into measurable revenue expansion.
The tech giant delivered adjusted earnings per share of $4.27 alongside revenue of $82.9 billion. Consensus estimates from FactSet had called for $4.05 and $81.4 billion respectively. Revenue climbed 18.3% compared to the same period last year.
Shares dipped during extended trading hours before stabilizing as executives provided forward guidance during the conference call.
Infrastructure Spending Accelerates While Cash Generation Softens
Capital spending for the quarter reached $31.9 billion, representing a 49% increase year-over-year. Free cash flow contracted 22% to $15.8 billion as Microsoft maintains aggressive investment in AI and cloud data center buildout.
Executives indicated that infrastructure spending will accelerate further — Q4 capex is anticipated to exceed $40 billion. Full fiscal year capital expenditure now stands at approximately $190 billion, substantially higher than the $160 billion Wall Street had modeled.
Cantor Fitzgerald maintained its Overweight rating along with a $502 price target following the earnings release. The research firm increased its fiscal 2027 revenue projections based on Azure momentum, while reducing gross margin forecasts by 140 basis points and lowering free cash flow estimates to reflect elevated spending levels.
DA Davidson preserved its Buy recommendation while adjusting its price target downward to $550 from $650.
Azure has reached approximately a $170 billion annualized revenue run rate, according to Cantor Fitzgerald’s analysis. Management highlighted ongoing capacity limitations and component availability challenges, particularly around memory components, during the earnings discussion.
AI Assistant Adoption Continues Upward Trajectory
M365 Copilot paid seat count surpassed 20 million, advancing from the 15 million figure disclosed in the prior quarter. GitHub Copilot adoption also contributed to elevated service delivery costs, which created pressure on gross margin performance.
CEO Satya Nadella emphasized the company’s commitment to “cloud and AI infrastructure” in the official earnings statement.
For the coming quarter, Microsoft provided revenue guidance spanning $86.7 billion to $87.8 billion. The midpoint falls slightly under the $87.6 billion analyst consensus figure.
MSFT shares have declined approximately 12% year-to-date entering this earnings report. Some of that weakness stems from investor concerns regarding whether emerging AI model architectures might reduce demand for conventional software offerings.
The stock traded roughly flat in after-hours activity following the guidance disclosure.

