Bill Ackman's Pershing Square Capital disclosed a $2.1 billion Microsoft position in its Q1 2026 13F filing, up from $890 million at year-end 2025. The firm added 4.8 million shares during a quarter when the S&P 500 fell 11.2% and tech volatility spiked to levels not seen since October 2023. Microsoft now represents roughly 8% of Pershing's disclosed equity book, the third-largest holding behind Chipotle and Hilton.
Ackman bought while the stock traded between $385 and $412 intraday, accumulating during March sessions when Azure growth concerns briefly pushed the name down 14% from February highs. The filing shows no options overlay—straight equity, consistent with Pershing's preference for uncomplicated exposure when conviction runs high. Microsoft closed Q1 at $428, meaning the position carried an unrealized gain of roughly $180 million at quarter-end, before the April rally that took shares above $450.
The stake arrives as Microsoft's commercial cloud annualized revenue run rate crossed $157 billion in the March quarter, with Copilot for Microsoft 365 now deployed across 12 million paid seats—triple the December figure. Azure AI services revenue grew 87% year-over-year, and the company guided capex to $80 billion for fiscal 2026, the largest infrastructure commitment in its history. Ackman's entry timing suggests he read the March drawdown as a structural mispricing, not a thesis break. The broader market treated rising AI capex as margin risk; Pershing treated it as moat-widening.
The position also reflects a view on operating leverage that becomes clearer in hindsight. Microsoft's Q1 gross margin expanded 190 basis points to 71.3%, driven by GitHub Copilot and Azure consumption mix shifting toward higher-margin inference workloads. The company's AI revenue run rate is now $15 billion annualized, up from $10 billion in December. Ackman has historically favored businesses where incremental revenue drops to the bottom line at accelerating rates—Chipotle's unit economics, Hilton's franchise model—and Microsoft's AI business is emerging with that profile.
Allocators should watch Microsoft's fiscal Q3 earnings on April 24, where management will detail Copilot attach rates and update the $80 billion capex deployment schedule. The May Azure growth print matters more than usual—consensus expects 29% constant-currency growth, but any figure below 27% would test Ackman's thesis in real time. Also track Pershing's Q2 13F in mid-August for evidence of further accumulation; if the fund added during April's rally above $450, it signals conviction beyond tactical opportunism. The firm's historical pattern is to build over two to three quarters when entering a new anchor position.
Ackman's move comes the same week Apollo structured a $36 billion debt deal to finance Google chip purchases for Anthropic, and Snowflake signed a $6 billion AWS commitment tied to AI infrastructure. The capital is flowing toward picks-and-shovels providers with margin structures that survive a prolonged build-out cycle. Microsoft sits at the intersection—it owns the Azure infrastructure layer, the GitHub distribution channel, and the OpenAI partnership that converts compute into enterprise SaaS revenue at 60%+ gross margins.
The takeaway
Ackman bought **$1.2 billion** of Microsoft during the March drawdown, now holding **8%** of the fund in a name printing **87%** AI growth.
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