Analyst Ratings January 29, 2026

Scotiabank Cuts Microsoft Price Target to $600 Citing Azure Capacity Constraints

Bank keeps Sector Outperform as management allocates GPU capacity to first-party apps and R&D, leaving Azure growth constrained in recent quarters

By Jordan Park MSFT
Scotiabank Cuts Microsoft Price Target to $600 Citing Azure Capacity Constraints
MSFT

Scotiabank trimmed its 12-month price objective for Microsoft to $600 from $650 while retaining a Sector Outperform rating after the company’s fiscal second-quarter report. The bank described results as "very solid" but highlighted Azure revenue growth that missed buy-side expectations in consecutive quarters, attributing part of the shortfall to how incremental GPU capacity was prioritized within Microsoft’s operations.

Key Points

  • Scotiabank cut Microsoft’s price target to $600 from $650 but maintained a Sector Outperform rating, signaling continued relative confidence despite near-term Azure concerns.
  • Microsoft reported fiscal Q2 revenue of $81 billion and non-GAAP EPS of $4.41, beating consensus estimates, while Azure grew 38% in constant currency but missed buy-side expectations.
  • Management said incremental GPU capacity was prioritized for first-party Copilot products and R&D before Azure; a 59% sequential rise in capex and $233 billion in commercial remaining performance obligations were cited as supports for potential Azure acceleration.

Scotiabank has reduced its price target on Microsoft Corporation to $600.00 from $650.00, while keeping a Sector Outperform rating, according to the research note released on Thursday. The revised target still implies substantial upside from Microsoft’s prevailing share price of $481.63, with the company trading at a price-to-earnings ratio of 34.12 and a market capitalization of $3.58 trillion.

The bank described Microsoft’s fiscal second-quarter results as "very solid," but added that the report lacked the extra momentum investors had hoped for because Azure growth fell short of buy-side expectations in both the second and third fiscal quarters. Over the past twelve months Microsoft has delivered revenue growth of 15.59%, producing total revenue of $293.81 billion for that period.

During an analyst callback, Microsoft said it prioritized incremental computing capacity for first-party applications - specifically Microsoft 365 Copilot and GitHub Copilot - and for research and development, with the remaining incremental capacity assigned to Azure. The company stated that, had GPU capacity been allocated exclusively to Azure, Azure revenue growth would have exceeded 40% year-over-year.

Scotiabank noted that these results do not appear to reflect cloud market-share losses to competitors such as Amazon, Google, or Oracle, nor do they indicate issues within the OpenAI ecosystem. The research team highlighted a 59% sequential increase in capital expenditures during the second quarter, viewing that rise in capex as supportive of potential Azure acceleration in the third and fourth fiscal quarters.

Commercial remaining performance obligations increased to $233 billion in the quarter. Scotiabank said that the larger backlog provides improved visibility into Azure’s revenue prospects for the coming year and said the combination of backlog and elevated capex underpinned its recommendation to buy Microsoft shares on any market weakness.

Microsoft’s stock momentum has been notable, with a 6.76% return over the last week. InvestingPro analysis referenced in the note indicates the shares are trading slightly above their Fair Value. Investors interested in additional depth can consult Microsoft’s Pro Research Report, which is available among more than 1,400 US equities covered on InvestingPro.

In its fiscal second-quarter earnings release, Microsoft reported $81 billion in revenue, representing a 17% year-over-year increase and beating analyst estimates by approximately 1%. The company’s non-GAAP earnings per share were $4.41, up 23% year-over-year and ahead of consensus by about 5%.

Despite the overall earnings beat, Microsoft’s Azure cloud business grew 38% in constant currency, a pace that fell slightly short of market expectations and prompted concern among some analysts. Following the earnings, several firms updated their price targets for the company:

  • Goldman Sachs reduced its price target to $600 from $655, citing concerns over capital expenditures.
  • Piper Sandler lowered its target to $600 from $650 while maintaining an Overweight rating.
  • BMO Capital cut its price target to $575 from $625, attributing the change to Azure growth concerns.
  • Oppenheimer kept its target at $630 and described Microsoft’s performance as "solid" despite the Azure deceleration.
  • RBC Capital maintained an Outperform rating with a $640 price target, noting that results were strong but did not fully satisfy elevated market expectations.

The interplay between capacity allocation, rising capital spending, and the composition of revenue backlog will be central to evaluating Microsoft’s cloud growth trajectory in the near term. Scotiabank’s lowered target reflects these dynamics even as the firm retains a constructive sector view.


Data snapshot

  • New Scotiabank price target: $600.00 (from $650.00)
  • Microsoft share price cited: $481.63
  • P/E ratio cited: 34.12
  • Market capitalization cited: $3.58 trillion
  • Trailing twelve-month revenue growth: 15.59%
  • Trailing twelve-month revenue: $293.81 billion
  • Fiscal Q2 revenue: $81 billion (up 17% year-over-year)
  • Non-GAAP EPS: $4.41 (up 23% year-over-year)
  • Azure growth (constant currency): 38%
  • Commercial remaining performance obligations: $233 billion
  • Sequential capex increase in Q2: 59%
  • One-week stock return cited: 6.76%

Readers should consider that projections and price targets reflect analysts' views and the metrics cited by research teams and management; the note described above represents Scotiabank's assessment as presented in its research communication.

Risks

  • Azure growth has lagged buy-side expectations in consecutive quarters, creating uncertainty for cloud revenue momentum - relevant to the cloud services and enterprise software sectors.
  • Allocation of limited GPU capacity to first-party applications and R&D may delay Azure expansion, introducing execution risk for Microsoft’s cloud business - impacting data center and AI infrastructure markets.
  • Capital expenditure patterns and their timing create uncertainty around when Azure growth could accelerate, which could affect investor valuation assumptions in the technology and cloud infrastructure sectors.

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