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Home AI & Quantum Computing

Microsoft’s Finnish Bet and $190 Billion Capex Signal Long-Term Faith as Earnings Loom Over a Beaten-Down Stock

Rodolfo Hanigan by Rodolfo Hanigan
July 15, 2026
in AI & Quantum Computing, Earnings, Tech & Software
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While Microsoft’s stock languishes near 52-week lows and the market frets over a shift in enterprise software spending, the company is quietly pressing ahead with one of its biggest European infrastructure commitments to date. A new data-center campus in the Finnish city of Seinäjoki, built by Pure Data Centres with backing from Oaktree Capital Management, has signed Microsoft as a tenant for its first phase. That initial stage carries a €1.5 billion price tag and delivers 110 megawatts of capacity — enough to power the equivalent of roughly 82,500 homes. The developer plans to expand the site to 550 megawatts at a total cost exceeding €7.5 billion, calling it the largest British foreign investment ever made in Finland. The entire first phase is already fully leased.

The Seinäjoki project follows a preliminary land purchase in June covering about 190 hectares in Vaasa and Mustasaari, also on Finland’s west coast, where another campus is slated. Together, they underscore Microsoft’s willingness to pour capital into AI‑ready infrastructure even as its stock endures a prolonged slump.

The shares closed Tuesday at €337.30, down roughly 16.25% year to date and more than 22% over the past twelve months. That leaves the stock some 30% below its October 2025 record of €478.10. A modest recovery from the June 25 low of €307.10 has lifted it about 10%, but the equity still trades beneath both its 50‑day moving average of €347.36 and its 200‑day line of €377.45. The relative strength index sits at 49.3, a neutral reading that offers little directional guidance.

The market’s current mood was set by IBM, which on July 14 published preliminary results that sent its own stock plunging 25%. CEO Arvind Krishna warned that corporate clients are rapidly reallocating budgets away from conventional software and toward AI hardware such as servers, storage, and specialized chips. The anxiety rippled through the tech sector, with Microsoft shedding 1.6% on Tuesday as investors braced for a potential industry-wide contraction in cloud and software spending. Despite the selloff, Microsoft’s valuation has compressed to 19–22 times forward earnings — a multiple not seen since 2018 and one that some analysts consider attractive.

All eyes now turn to the July 29 quarterly report, Microsoft’s fourth fiscal quarter. The consensus calls for revenue of $87.66 billion, a 15% year‑over‑year increase, and adjusted earnings per share of $4.24. Management has guided for Azure growth of roughly 40%, supported by an annualized AI revenue run rate that has surged 123% to $37 billion. The cloud backlog, a measure of future committed revenue, has nearly doubled to $627 billion. Behind those figures lies an enormous investment program: Microsoft plans to spend $190 billion on capital expenditures in fiscal 2026.

Should investors sell immediately? Or is it worth buying Microsoft?

But the path to monetizing that spending is not without friction. In a strategic update on July 12, CEO Satya Nadella flagged a risk he calls “double paying” — companies that use proprietary AI models may end up covering the cost twice: once for the tokens they consume and again when providers distill those companies’ confidential data into cheaper, competing models. Microsoft is responding with private learning environments that let customers switch between models without exposing their data. The concern is real: open‑source models already account for 29% of traffic routed through the Vercel gateway.

Institutional investors are sending mixed signals. In the first quarter, Keybank National Association trimmed its stake by 0.2%, while Eagle Bay Advisors cut by a sharper 19.4%. By contrast, Sweden’s Fjarde AP Fonden boosted its holding by 63.4% and now owns more than two million shares.

Technical headwinds are accompanied by operational ones. Microsoft this week released its largest‑ever monthly security update, closing 622 vulnerabilities — nearly three times the previous record set in June. Sixty of the flaws were rated critical, and two zero‑day vulnerabilities were already being exploited in the wild: an Active Directory Federation Services bug (CVE‑2026‑56155) and a SharePoint Server authentication flaw (CVE‑2026‑56164). Pavan Davuluri, the company’s executive vice president, attributed the surge in patch volume to AI‑driven security research, warning that Windows users should expect “a higher volume of security updates” going forward. The July update also marked the official end of support for SharePoint Server 2016 and 2019.

The stark contrast between Microsoft’s aggressive infrastructure buildout and its depressed share price creates a moment of tension. The Finnish data center, like the broader $190 billion spending plan, reflects a conviction that AI demand will eventually reward these outlays. Whether that conviction translates into a stock rebound may well depend on whether the July 29 results show that AI growth can indeed offset the slowdown in traditional software — and convince a skeptical market to look past the current correction.

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Tags: Microsoft
Rodolfo Hanigan

Rodolfo Hanigan

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