Dhaka, Bangladesh - 08 January 2024 : Microsoft Copilot Ai logo on smartphone with bg Microsoft logo.

Microsoft’s AI Push Beyond OpenAI Could Drive Next Breakout

Dhaka, Bangladesh - 08 January 2024 : Microsoft Copilot Ai logo on smartphone with bg Microsoft logo.

Microsoft Corporation (NASDAQ: MSFT) continues to be one of the best-performing companies in the technology sector and the broader market. MSFT stock is up more than 19% in 2025, and over 132% in the last five years. That doesn’t include the company’s rock-solid dividend. All in all, the blue-chip stock has reached the status of a stock you own, not trade.

However, the company does have at least one area of potential concern for investors. A key reason for its growth in the past 18 months stems from its partnership with OpenAI. Earlier this year, the partnership showed its first signs of unwinding. Microsoft AI (MAI), its in-house artificial intelligence (AI) development team, just launched its initial AI models.

  • MAI-Voice-1 targets high-fidelity voice generation. Specifically, the model natively generates expressive and natural sounding voice. The model is deployed in several of the company’s consumer-facing features such as Copilot Daily.
  • MAI-1-preview is a foundational text model that is designed to help users with everyday queries. It's currently in public testing and the plan is for a gradual rollout for Copilot features.

A Strategic Break from OpenAI

Microsoft and OpenAI have been partners since Microsoft’s initial $1 billion investment in 2019. That initial investment, which has grown to over $13 billion, gave Microsoft access to OpenAI’s generative AI program, better known as ChatGPT.

Microsoft has tightly integrated ChatGPT across its AI stack, using OpenAI’s models to power its Copilot assistants. This partnership gave Microsoft an early lead in the AI race.

But OpenAI has always served as a bridge to Microsoft’s own in-house AI ambitions. The launch of proprietary large language models marks the first step in that transition.

By developing its own LLMs, Microsoft gains greater control over its AI stack—reducing reliance on an external partner, minimizing access risks, and eliminating potential innovation lags tied to OpenAI’s roadmap.

Long-Term Investors May Notice a Familiar Pattern

This appears to be the latest example of a common strategy for Microsoft in which it dominates, then owns critical technology infrastructure. An example of this occurred in the 2010s when Microsoft made its strategic shift to cloud computing with Azure.

To facilitate this transition, the company made several strategic acquisitions that enhanced Azure’s operational efficiency and network capabilities. This vaulted the company to a leadership position in cloud infrastructure.

From there, the company has expanded Azure to support mission-critical workloads for government, financial and industrial clients. Today, Azure has become the foundation of modern enterprise IT.

Do These Models Enhance the Bull Case for MSFT Stock?

Investors may wonder if Microsoft’s pivot to homegrown AI models will deliver a measurable financial impact. One area to watch when the company reports earnings will be its margins in its Azure business. AI workloads are expected to drive revenue growth in this business.

The models also vertically integrate Microsoft’s AI stack, allowing it to better differentiate Copilot and Azure services. This could strengthen the company’s ability to retain existing customers and successfully compete with companies like Alphabet and Meta, which continue to scale their models.

Microsoft is also launching these products at a time when investors are concerned about the company’s valuation. At around 36x earnings, the stock is trading at a slight premium to its historical average.

However, if these models reduce Microsoft’s dependency on OpenAI and accelerate AI adoption across Azure and productivity software, analysts may believe that the premium is justified. That could push the consensus price target above its current level of around $612, which is about 21% above the stock price as of this writing.

Learn more about MSFT

Newest Stories

Investment strategy is shown using the text and photo of dollars
Institutions Are Snapping Up These 2 Financial Stocks—Should You?

Individual investors are always looking for hints as to where stocks are heading next. Some use fundamental analysis to look for strong earnings growth, reasonable valuations, and manageable debt loads. Others use technical analysis to spot trend reversals or gauge the strength of momentum in a pa...

Dan Schmidt | Sep 05, 2025

Cans of Pepsi cola
Why Hedge Fund Elliott Bet $4B on Pepsi and Sees Over 50% Upside

For shareholders in beverage and snack behemoth PepsiCo (NASDAQ: PEP), the last few years have done anything but satiate their appetite for returns. Year-to-date, Pepsi has provided a total return of approximately 20% over the past five years.  Without including dividends, shares are up&nb...

Leo Miller | Sep 05, 2025

OKLO logo over stock ticker
Here's What Separates Oklo From the Rest of the Nuclear Startups

Oil and gas have dragged down the energy sector this year, but one subsect that’s been a bright spot is nuclear energy. But ballooning energy demand from AI data centers and bipartisan support for nuclear power have resulted in surging stock valuations across the industry. Cameco (NYSE...

Jordan Chussler | Sep 05, 2025

Why Marvell’s 19% Drop Could Be a Big Buy-the-Dip Opportunity
Why Marvell’s 19% Drop Could Be a Big Buy-the-Dip Opportunity

Over the last few years, Marvell Technology (NASDAQ: MRVL) has become one of the in-vogue stocks among investors when it comes to placing bets on the artificial intelligence (AI) revolution. Marvell challenges a dominant player in AI, competing against Broadcom (NASDAQ: AVGO) in custom silicon....

Leo Miller | Sep 05, 2025

TickerTalk Unveils Real-Time Financial Insights and Breaking News!