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Microsoft stock: what triggered MSFT’s sudden plunge on AI Foundry concerns?

Microsoft stock (NASDAQ: MSFT) tumbled sharply on Wednesday, shedding nearly 3% intraday and weighing on the broader tech sector, after fresh reporting suggested the company is quietly scaling back sales targets for its marquee AI products.

The selloff reflects a sudden jolt of skepticism regarding the near-term monetization of enterprise AI, as reports indicate that Microsoft’s “AI Foundry” initiatives are struggling to convert early pilot interest into the massive, scalable revenue streams Wall Street had priced in.

Sales targets quietly cut as enterprise AI demand softens

The catalyst for the drop was a report from The Information, later corroborated by market sources, revealing that Microsoft has reduced internal growth quotas for its AI Foundry teams.

According to the reporting, fewer than 20% of salespeople in a key Azure unit met their targets for “Foundry” products, a suite of tools designed to help enterprises build and manage autonomous AI agents, during the fiscal year ending in June.

In response, Microsoft reportedly slashed growth goals for the current fiscal year from an ambitious 50% down to roughly 25%.​

Microsoft has pushed back on these reports, disputing the characterization of its internal targets and performance.

While hype around generative AI remains high, enterprise customers are reportedly pushing back on the cost and complexity of large-scale deployments.

Sales teams have allegedly been instructed to pivot away from aggressive Foundry bundles and instead focus on smaller, “pilot” workloads to secure wins.

For investors, this reported walk-back is a red flag: it suggests that the “exponential” adoption curve many analysts predicted for 2025/2026 is flattening into a more gradual, cost-conscious ramp. ​

Microsoft stock: Investors reprice AI premium

The market reaction was swift and unforgiving. MSFT stock underperformed its mega-cap peers, dragging the Nasdaq 100 lower as traders reassessed the “AI premium” baked into the share price.

Until now, Microsoft has been viewed as the “safest” AI bet, trading at a valuation that assumes near-flawless execution on its OpenAI partnership and Copilot ecosystem.

The news of slashed quotas strikes at the heart of this thesis. Unlike hardware shortages (which imply excess demand), a sales target cut implies weak demand, a far more dangerous signal for a growth stock.

This selloff is notable because it contradicts the bullish capital expenditure (capex) narrative.

While Microsoft continues to spend billions on data centers and GPUs, the revenue side of the equation is showing cracks.

If Foundry, a high-margin, strategic layer meant to lock customers into the Azure ecosystem, is seeing resistance, it raises uncomfortable questions about the ROI of that massive infrastructure spend.

Is this just a temporary “digestion” period as companies learn to use AI, or is it an early warning that enterprise AI spending in 2026 will be far more scrutinized than in 2024?​

The post Microsoft stock: what triggered MSFT’s sudden plunge on AI Foundry concerns? appeared first on Invezz

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