With Microsoft (MSFT) poised to generate tremendous revenue from the top two artificial intelligence startups, MSFT stock is a buy at this point for investors looking for increased exposure to AI and/or Big Tech.
Among the other important, positive attributes of MSFT stock are its strong financial results, its relatively low valuation, its high exposure to software, and its low risk,
One of the world’s leading software makers, MSFT markets the Windows operating system, along with the Office suite of software. The firm also provides cloud services through its Azure unit.
Although the tech giant has a huge market capitalization of $3.5 trillion, its forward price-earnings ratio is a relatively low 29.8 times, while its trailing P/E ratio is just under 33 times.
In Microsoft’s fiscal first quarter that ended in September, its revenue climbed 18% versus the same period a year earlier to $77.7 billion, while its operating income jumped 24% year-over-year to $38 billion.
Suggesting that the name can rise a great deal in the longer term, its Relative Strength Index was just 32 as of Nov. 25.
Under the deal between Microsoft, Anthropic, and Nvidia (NVDA) announced on Nov. 18, Anthropic agreed to spend $30 billion on MSFT’s “compute capacity,” along with obtaining up to 1 gigawatt of additional computing power from the tech giant. Further, Nvidia will invest as much as $10 billion in Anthropic, and MSFT will provide the startup with up to $5 billion. Also noteworthy is that “Anthropic will scale its Claude AI model on Microsoft Azure, powered by NVIDIA technology.”
Although Microsoft has made some minor deals with Anthropic in the past, this appears to be the first time that the two firms have signed major, multibillion dollar contracts. And as a result of these agreements, the tech giant’s cloud unit is likely, for the foreseeable future, to get large amounts of revenue from the two hottest, biggest startups in the AI space: Anthropic and OpenAI. Those revenue streams should help enable MSFT’s Azure to continue growing very rapidly in the longer term. (MSFT’s sales from Azure “and other cloud services” jumped 40% year-over-year in MSFT’s Q1).



