Microsoft (MSFT) stock was trading at $431.16 on Thursday, up 0.9% or $3.82, as the company wrapped up its Build 2026 developer conference. The stock sits well below its 52-week high of $555.45, though the broader analyst community remains bullish.
TD Cowen reaffirmed its Buy rating and $540 price target following the conference. The firm pointed to Microsoft’s launch of seven new self-built AI models as a key development, saying the move signals a shift in how the company plans to build and deploy AI going forward.
The new models — which include MAI-Code-1 and MAI-Thinking-1 — are designed for fine-tuning and cost optimization. TD Cowen said the launches explain why GPU capacity had been allocated to internal R&D in recent quarters, rather than relying heavily on outside labs.
Build 2026 also featured the debut of Microsoft Scout, an agentic AI personal assistant, and a deeper partnership with Nvidia on AI PCs and Azure infrastructure. Pinecone announced a new integration with Microsoft OneLake at the same event, expanding the ecosystem around Microsoft’s AI tools.
Microsoft’s most recent quarterly results gave analysts more reason to stay positive. The company reported EPS of $4.27 for Q3, beating the consensus estimate of $4.06 by $0.21. Revenue came in at $82.89 billion, above the $81.44 billion expectation and up 18.3% from the same period last year.
Return on equity stood at 31.94%, with a net margin of 39.34%. Analysts currently expect full-year EPS of $16.76.
The stock has a market cap of $3.2 trillion, a P/E ratio of 25.62, and a 200-day moving average of $432.76. Its 52-week low is $356.28.
Beyond TD Cowen, support across Wall Street is wide. UBS, Deutsche Bank, Jefferies, JMP Securities, and BMO Capital Markets all carry Buy or equivalent ratings. The consensus price target sits at $561.20 across 41 Buy ratings and 6 Hold ratings.
Cantor Fitzgerald holds an Overweight rating with a $502 target, highlighting Microsoft’s move from Copilot-style assistants toward a full enterprise agent platform. Jefferies carries a $575 target, citing Microsoft’s flexible, model-agnostic AI strategy.
Not everything points up. CEO Judson Althoff sold 15,500 shares on June 1st at an average of $460.99, totaling $7.1 million — a 12.3% cut to his position. EVP Amy Coleman also sold 1,262 shares in May. Insiders have sold a combined $12.7 million worth of stock over the past quarter.
Some investors have also flagged concern over the pace of AI infrastructure spending, questioning when those investments will translate into clearer returns.
Microsoft’s Majorana 2 quantum chip was also announced at Build, with the company saying it expects to have systems ready by 2029.
The post Microsoft (MSFT) Stock: In-House AI Push Could Change the Game for MSFT appeared first on CoinCentral.