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Microsoft gains $7.6B from OpenAI last quarter

In a major earnings report released on Wednesday, January 28, 2026, Microsoft revealed a massive $7.6 billion after-tax gain (approximately $10 billion pre-tax) directly tied to its investment in OpenAI.

This accounting windfallโ€”a result of OpenAIโ€™s October 2025 recapitalizationโ€”boosted Microsoftโ€™s GAAP net income to $38.5 billion for the quarter, marking a 60% year-on-year jump.


1. The Financial Breakdown: GAAP vs. Non-GAAP

While the $7.6 billion gain looks impressive on paper, Microsoft encouraged investors to focus on its “adjusted” (non-GAAP) figures to see the underlying health of the business.

Financial MetricQ2 FY2025 (Last Year)Q2 FY2026 (Current)Change (YoY)
Total Revenue$69.6 Billion$81.3 Billionโ†‘ 17%
Net Income (GAAP)$24.1 Billion$38.5 Billionโ†‘ 60%
Net Income (Adjusted)$25.0 Billion$30.9 Billionโ†‘ 23%
EPS (Adjusted)$3.35$4.14โ†‘ 24%

2. The OpenAI “Backlog” & Commercial Commitments

The most telling figure in the report was the Commercial Remaining Performance Obligation (RPO), which represents contracted future revenue.

  • The $625 Billion Pile: Microsoft’s backlog surged 110% year-over-year.
  • The OpenAI Factor: Roughly 45% (~$281 billion) of this future revenue is linked to OpenAIโ€™s long-term commitment to purchase Azure cloud capacity.
  • Anthropic Growth: The RPO was also bolstered by a new $30 billion cloud deal with rival lab Anthropic, signaling that Microsoft is successfully diversifying its AI hosting revenue.

3. The Cost of Leadership: $37.5 Billion in Capex

Despite the record profits, Microsoftโ€™s stock initially slid 5โ€“7% after-hours due to the staggering cost of maintaining its AI advantage.

  • GPU Build-out: Capital expenditures jumped 66% to $37.5 billion in a single quarter.
  • The Supply Gap: CEO Satya Nadella noted that “demand for cloud services continues to exceed available supply,” leading the company to add 1 gigawatt of capacity this quarter alone.
  • Custom Silicon: To lower costs, Microsoft brought its Maia 200 AI accelerator online, claiming a 30% improvement in total cost of ownership (TCO) compared to off-the-shelf hardware.

4. Azure and Copilot Momentum

Azure remains the primary engine of growth, though investors are now scrutinizing even the slightest decelerations.

  • Azure Growth: Revenue from Azure and other cloud services grew 39%, beating management’s guidance of 37%.
  • Copilot Adoption: For the first time, Microsoft disclosed that Microsoft 365 Copilot has reached 15 million paid seats, with daily users increasing nearly 3x year-over-year.
  • Foundry Success: Over 1,500 customers are now using both Anthropic and OpenAI models on Microsoft’s “Foundry” platform.

Conclusion: A “Show Me the Money” Moment

The $7.6 billion gain underscores the massive valuation surge of OpenAI, but it also highlights Microsoft’s growing dependence on its partner. With nearly half of its future cloud backlog tied to a single startup and capex reaching historic highs, 2026 is becoming the year where Microsoft must prove that its “AI super factory” can generate durable, long-term margins.

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