Microsoft Today
$352.83 -12.63 (-3.46%) As of 04:00 PM Eastern
- 52-Week Range
- $349.20
▼
$555.45 - Dividend Yield
- 1.03%
- P/E Ratio
- 21.00
- Price Target
- $560.86
Microsoft NASDAQ: MSFT investors just got an answer to the question hanging over the artificial intelligence (AI) infrastructure trade. Where does the power come from?
On June 22, Chevron NYSE: CVX and Microsoft signed a 20-year power purchase agreement. The deal funds Project Kilby, a 2.67-gigawatt natural gas plant in West Texas. The total cost for the campus is estimated at roughly $7 billion. Initial power is targeted for 2028.
For Microsoft shareholders, this is the most consequential MSFT stock development since the OpenAI partnership. That may sound like hyperbole, but investors who have been paying attention to the issues surrounding the buildout of data centers will find the benefits from this deal hard to understate.
The Real AI Bottleneck Is Power Availability
Wall Street spent two years obsessing over NVIDIA NASDAQ: NVDA chip allocation. The smarter constraint to watch was always the grid.
AI data centers need uninterrupted, dispatchable electricity at scale. Utility interconnect queues now stretch three to seven years. That timeline is incompatible with how fast Microsoft needs to deploy Azure AI capacity.
Project Kilby fixes that. Instead of waiting in line, Microsoft is building its own line.
The plant is co-located with the data center. There is no transmission build-out and no grid wait. At 2.67 gigawatts, the facility could power more than 530,000 Texas homes.
Why Microsoft Chose Natural Gas Over Nuclear
Hyperscaler power strategies are diverging fast. The contrasts matter for MSFT shareholders.
Meta Platforms NASDAQ: META signed nuclear deals targeting up to 6.6 gigawatts by 2035. Most of those megawatts depend on small modular reactors. However, those reactors don’t yet exist at a commercial scale.
Amazon NASDAQ: AMZN signed an $18 billion, 17-year nuclear PPA with Talen Energy NASDAQ: TLN. However, full 1.92-gigawatt delivery won’t happen until 2032 and still faces regulatory hurdles. Nuclear energy is coming soon, but not today.
Microsoft chose natural gas that will come from the Permian Basin. The technology is proven, and the project comes with a firm timeline and domestic supply chain.
How Project Kilby Strengthens Azure Economics
Energy is the single largest operating cost for AI compute. A 20-year fixed PPA cuts tail risk on Azure AI gross margins. With this deal, Microsoft locks in price exposure through 2048. That kind of cost certainty is rare in a hyper-competitive cloud market.
For investors modeling long-dated free cash flow, this matters because it makes it more likely that Microsoft will generate a return on invested capital. It also gives Microsoft a margin advantage that competitors will struggle to match.
Microsoft is guiding to roughly $190 billion in fiscal 2026 capital expenditure (CapEx). Critics worry the spend is outrunning monetization. The Chevron deal pushes back on that narrative. Microsoft is not just buying GPUs. It is locking in the inputs that those GPUs need to run.
That’s a disciplined infrastructure build. The market has historically rewarded companies that take that approach with expanding multiples.
The deal also signals Microsoft will partner with Big Oil for execution speed. Sustainability purists may object. Enterprise customers focused on uptime will not.
Stocks That Benefit From Microsoft’s Power Buildout
This deal has clear collateral winners that MSFT investors should track:
Chevron itself gets a 20-year contracted revenue stream that diversifies away from oil price beta. The Permian natural gas demand thesis just got a long-dated anchor customer.
Key Risks Investors Should Watch
Microsoft MarketRank™ Stock Analysis
- Overall MarketRank™
- 100th Percentile
- Analyst Rating
- Moderate Buy
- Upside/Downside
- 56.8% Upside
- Short Interest Level
- Healthy
- Dividend Strength
- Strong
- News Sentiment
- 0.92

- Insider Trading
- Selling Shares
- Proj. Earnings Growth
- 15.04%
See Full AnalysisThe deal is not yet closed. Chevron's Final Investment Decision is expected by the end of 2026. Construction risk, permitting delays, and Permian gas pricing all remain live.
The first power is two years out. Microsoft still needs interim solutions through 2028. Azure AI demand must also materialize at the rate management is forecasting.
Sustainability-focused investors may downgrade Microsoft's ESG profile. Natural gas emissions are a step backward from prior clean-energy commitments.
Finally, the AI CapEx cycle itself could cool before Project Kilby goes live. A demand pullback in 2027 would leave Microsoft holding contracted megawatts it does not need.
Securing the Foundation of AI Growth
The bull case for Microsoft has rested on two pillars. Azure AI revenue growth and disciplined infrastructure execution.
This deal materially strengthens the second pillar. It also signals to the Street that Microsoft has identified the real bottleneck and has come up with a practical solution.
Competitors are betting on nuclear timelines that may slip. Microsoft is betting on gas turbines that ship on schedule. In a race measured in quarters, that’s the right trade.
For MSFT investors with a multi-year horizon, Project Kilby is the kind of unglamorous infrastructure decision that compounds. The headlines will move on by next week. The 2.67 gigawatts will be running for the next two decades.
Before you consider Microsoft, you'll want to hear this.
MarketBeat keeps track of Wall Street's top-rated and best performing research analysts and the stocks they recommend to their clients on a daily basis. MarketBeat has identified the five stocks that top analysts are quietly whispering to their clients to buy now before the broader market catches on... and Microsoft wasn't on the list.
While Microsoft currently has a Moderate Buy rating among analysts, top-rated analysts believe these five stocks are better buys.
View The Five Stocks Here
Nuclear energy is entering a new growth cycle as rising power demand, expanding data centers, and renewed policy support bring the sector back into focus. After strong gains in recent years, the most impactful phase of nuclear investment may still be ahead.
This report highlights seven nuclear energy stocks positioned across the value chain—combining near-term revenue with long-term upside as next-generation technologies scale. Click the link below to unlock the full list.
Get This Free Report