July sets up as a rare buying window for forever holders. Two of the three mega-caps below are trading well off their 52-week highs, and the third just reported its best March quarter in company history. The thesis here is durability: cloud and AI scale at Microsoft, the global payments toll-booth at Visa, and Apple’s 2.5-billion-device ecosystem. Each pick gets one verified data point, a plain-language bull case, and one caveat for the long-term holder.
Microsoft (MSFT)
Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT | MSFT Price Prediction) is the contrarian no-brainer on this list. Shares traded around $390 on July 2, leaving the stock down more than 17% year to date and more than 20% off where it traded a year ago. That drawdown stands in stark contradiction to the operating numbers.
In Q3 FY26, Microsoft posted EPS of $4.27 vs. $4.07 consensus, the fourth consecutive quarter topping Wall Street EPS expectations. Revenue grew 18% to $82.89 billion, Azure expanded 40%, and Commercial RPO nearly doubled to $627 billion: a multi-year revenue backlog that is itself larger than the GDP of most countries. CEO Satya Nadella noted, “Our AI business surpassed an annual revenue run rate of $37 billion, up 123% year-over-year.”
Bull case: A fortress balance sheet (debt/equity 0.18, 34% ROE), 52 Buy or Strong Buy ratings against three Hold ratings, and an analyst target of $561.11 against today’s mid-$370s price. Forward P/E of 19x is the cheapest Microsoft has looked in years.
Risk: CapEx hit $30.88 billion in Q3 alone, up 84% year over year. Investors will keep scrutinizing AI ROI, and sentiment has cooled 13 points over 30 days.
Visa (V)
Visa (NYSE:V) is the toll-booth that keeps collecting regardless of macro weather. Shares trade at $362.13, up more than 14% over the past month as the rest of mega-cap tech digests AI hangovers. Over the last decade the stock has returned 392% on a price basis.
In Q1 FY26, Visa reported non-GAAP EPS of $3.17 on revenue of $10.90 billion, growth of 15% year over year. Data processing revenue, the purest expression of the toll-booth model, grew 17%. Processed transactions hit 69.4 billion in a single quarter. CEO Ryan McInerney described Visa as a “payments hyperscaler.”
Bull case: A genuine duopoly, 52% profit margin, 60% return on equity, and aggressive capital return: $21.1 billion remaining buyback authorization plus a 14% dividend hike last fall. Analysts carry a target of $398.83 with 35 Buy or Strong Buy ratings against zero Sell ratings.
Risk: Interchange MDL litigation continues to weigh on GAAP results: a $707 million provision in Q1 FY26 and $899 million the quarter prior. Regulatory pressure on payment rails is a permanent feature of this story, not a passing storm.
Apple (AAPL)
Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) is the momentum pick of the three. Shares trade at $308.63, up more than 45% over the trailing year and around 757% over the past decade decade. The iPhone 17 supercycle is doing what skeptics said couldn’t happen anymore.
Q2 FY26 produced $111.18 billion in revenue, growth of 17%, with EPS of $2.01 beating consensus and extending the streak to 8 consecutive quarters of beats. iPhone revenue hit $56.99 billion, a March quarter record. Services posted an all-time high of $30.98 billion. Tim Cook called it “extraordinary demand for the iPhone 17 lineup.”
Bull case: An installed base of 2.5 billion active devices, accelerating high-margin Services revenue, and a fresh $100 billion buyback authorization paired with a 4% dividend hike. Few companies on earth print this much cash this consistently.
Risk: At a P/E near 37, Apple is priced for perfection. Greater China revenue of $25.53 billion in Q1 FY26 sits squarely in the crosshairs of geopolitical risk and App Store regulatory scrutiny remains a slow-burn overhang.
What to Watch in July
Microsoft reports Q4 FY26 results in late July, Visa follows with Q3 FY26, and Apple’s June-quarter earnings report typically lands the first week of August. Three earnings reports inside roughly 30 days should resolve whether the AI capex bill at Microsoft is producing returns, whether Visa’s consumer spending narrative holds, and whether the iPhone 17 cycle has legs into the holiday quarter. For forever holders, July’s setup offers entries at different points on the risk curve: deepest discount in Microsoft, steadiest compounder in Visa, strongest current momentum in Apple.
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