Two separate announcements on July 1, 2026, both bearing on Microsoft’s ability to convert its cloud investments into revenue, have put a spotlight on the company’s pricing power and its push into regulated markets. The Redmond giant quietly raised prices on its commercial Microsoft 365 suites, while IT services provider Kyndryl unveiled an expanded sovereign cloud offering built on Azure – a move that opens the door to customers demanding strict data residency and operational control.
The price adjustments hit almost the entire commercial portfolio. Office 365 E3 jumps from $23 to $26 per user per month, a 13% increase; Office 365 E5 moves from $38 to $41, Microsoft 365 E3 from $36 to $39, and Microsoft 365 E5 from $57 to $60. The sharpest percentage lifts are reserved for frontline workers: Microsoft 365 F1 rises from $2.25 to $3.00, and F3 from $8.00 to $10.00. Existing customers will not feel the impact until their next contract renewal, meaning the revenue tail will stretch across several quarters rather than arriving in one lump sum. In exchange, Microsoft bundles new security and management tools – including Microsoft Defender for Office 365 Plan 1 and Intune Remote Help – with full feature roll-out expected by August 1, 2026. Teams and Copilot standalone licences are exempt.
On the sovereign cloud front, Kyndryl is combining its own sovereignty advisory services with Microsoft’s Azure, Microsoft 365, and Azure Local technologies. The offering is aimed squarely at governments and regulated industries such as financial services, which must comply with GDPR, DORA and NIS2. Kyndryl’s Sovereignty Readiness Assessment helps clients identify gaps in data, operations and technology, then builds a migration roadmap. The partnership adds a distribution channel for Azure in environments that require data to stay within national borders and operations to be independently auditable. No financial terms were disclosed, so direct revenue impact is impossible to quantify, but the strategic positioning reinforces Microsoft’s effort to make its cloud palatable for compliance-heavy workloads.
Should investors sell immediately? Or is it worth buying Microsoft?
Both developments land against a backdrop of solid – but costly – growth. In the fiscal third quarter ended March 31, 2026, Microsoft reported total revenue of $82.9 billion, up 18% year over year. Operating income rose 20% to $38.4 billion. The Productivity and Business Processes segment, which houses Microsoft 365, generated $35.0 billion in revenue, a 17% increase. Microsoft 365 Commercial cloud revenue grew 19% while paid user accounts expanded 6%. Yet the Intelligent Cloud segment, while seeing a 30% revenue jump, saw costs climb 47% as capital expenditure on AI infrastructure and increased GitHub Copilot usage weighed on margins. Azure itself grew 40% (39% currency-adjusted), and the commercial remaining performance obligation – a gauge of future contracted revenue – hit $627 billion.
The stock’s reaction reveals caution. In New York, the Microsoft share ended at $384.28, up $11.31 on the day, giving a market capitalisation of about $2.86 trillion. But on the German exchange, where the stock closed at €337.25, the picture is more nuanced: the ticker has bounced 8.72% over seven days but remains down 11.10% for the month, 16.44% year-to-date and 18.96% over twelve months. The 52-week high of $478.10 from October 2025 is now 29.46% above current levels, while the 52-week low of $307.10, touched just days earlier on June 25, sits only 9.82% below. Technical signals offer little comfort: the stock trades below both its 50-day moving average of $351.17 and its 200-day average of $382.40.
For investors, the key question is whether these twin levers – price increases and an expanded sovereign cloud channel – will eventually translate into durable revenue growth without throttling user acquisition. The pricing move gives Microsoft a clearer path to monetise the AI, security and management features it has bundled into its software stack. The Kyndryl deal, meanwhile, widens the addressable market for Azure among customers who cannot cede control of their data to a public cloud. Both initiatives need to be judged not by the announcements themselves, but by the renewal rates and consumption figures that will emerge in the coming quarters. Management’s commentary on contract extensions and Azure capacity constraints in the next earnings report will be scrutinised more than ever.
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