By Jonathan Stempel
June 15 (Reuters) – Microsoft has been sued by shareholders who accused the company of defrauding them and inflating its stock price โby failing to disclose slowing growth in its Azure cloud business โand the need to spend billions of dollars on AI infrastructure.
The proposed class action led by a โMichigan pension fund was filed in Seattle federal court on Friday, after Microsoft shares fell 10% on January 29 in response to its quarterly earnings report a day earlier.
About $357 billion of market value was erased, and Microsoft’s stock suffered its biggest one-day โdecline in nearly six years.
Microsoft โ said on Monday it believes the claims are “without merit,” adding, “Microsoft stands by the integrity of its public statements and will vigorously โ defend itself in court.โ
โข For its fiscal second quarter ending in December, Microsoft reported 39% revenue growth in its Azure and other cloud businesses, meeting analyst forecasts but โdown from โ40% in the prior quarter, and projected โ37% to 38% growth in โthe first three months of 2026.
โข Microsoft also reported $37.5 billion of capital spending in its second quarter, up nearly 66% from a year earlier and above the $34.3 billion that analysts projected.
โข The lawsuit said Microsoft attributed the slowing Azure growth and higher spending to capacity constraints as it diverted resources to AI-related research and development โand to its Copilot chatbot, whose rivals โinclude Google’s Gemini and OpenAI’s ChatGPT.
โข Microsoft, based โin Redmond, Washington, is a major โinvestor in OpenAI.
โข The lawsuit is led by the City โof St. Clair Shores Police and โFire Retirement System in โMichigan.
โข Defendants include several Microsoft officials, including Chief Executive Satya Nadella and Chief Financial Officer Amy Hood.
โข The proposed class period runs from May โ1, 2025 to January โ28, 2026.
โข It is common for shareholders to sue companies for alleged โsecurities fraud after unexpected declines in stock prices.
(Reporting by Jonathan Stempel โin New York; Editing by Bill Berkrot)