Billionaire investor Bill Ackman revealed Pershing Square has established a significant position in Microsoft (MSFT) through regulatory filings submitted Friday. Shares responded positively, climbing 3% to finish at $421.92.
Microsoft Corporation, MSFT
According to Ackman, the position was initiated in February following a “substantial” selloff that came after Microsoft reported fiscal Q2 2026 results. The fund accumulated shares at approximately 21 times forward earnings — a valuation matching the broader S&P 500 and significantly below Microsoft’s historical trading range.
The tech giant has faced headwinds in 2026. Shares have declined 17% year-to-date, contrasting sharply with the S&P 500’s 10% gain.
The weakness followed a disappointing Q3 earnings announcement that sparked concerns regarding Azure’s expansion rate. Microsoft further revealed plans for $190 billion in capital spending for calendar 2026 — representing a 61% annual increase and exceeding analyst expectations by roughly $35 billion.
While Ackman recognizes these challenges, he maintains the market is overlooking a critical asset.
Ackman highlighted Microsoft’s 27% ownership in OpenAI, which he estimates carries a $200 billion valuation — equivalent to approximately 7% of Microsoft’s total market capitalization. He contends this substantial value remains absent from current share prices.
The investor also dismissed concerns about Microsoft 365 facing displacement from AI competitors. He maintains that M365’s deep integration across enterprise systems — encompassing identity management, security infrastructure, compliance frameworks, and data governance — creates formidable barriers against replacement by emerging AI applications.
Ackman liquidated his Alphabet position to generate capital for the Microsoft investment. He took to social media Saturday to emphasize this wasn’t a negative signal regarding Google’s prospects.
From a technical perspective, Evercore ISI’s Rich Ross observed Microsoft displays one of the “best acting charts” among technology stocks currently, noting the shares have recaptured their 50-day moving average with “authority” and retreated to a long-standing support level that’s remained intact since the European debt crisis.
Ackman’s track record with major technology investments includes his previous long-term Alphabet position before this strategic shift to Microsoft.
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