Meta Platforms (NASDAQ: META | META Price Prediction) and Microsoft (NASDAQ: MSFT) both reported earnings on April 29, 2026, and both have been punished in 2026 despite operational strength. Meta is off 11.54% year to date; Microsoft has fared worse at down 18.9%. The market is asking which Mag 7 titan is truly the bargain.
Ad Engine Roars. Azure Backlog Balloons.
Meta delivered a jaw-dropping quarter: revenue of $56.31 billion (+33.1% YoY) and EPS of $10.44 vs. $6.66 consensus. A $8.03 billion tax benefit flattered the bottom line, but the underlying ad engine is genuinely hot, with ad impressions up 19% and price per ad up 12% across a family reaching 3.56 billion daily users.
Microsoft’s headline was steadier. Revenue landed at $82.89 billion (+18.3%) with EPS of $4.27, a fourth straight beat. The real story is contracted demand. Commercial RPO nearly doubled to $627 billion, and the AI business hit a $37 billion annualized run rate, up 123% YoY. Azure alone grew 40%.
| Business Driver | Meta | Microsoft |
| Growth engine | Ad pricing + impressions | Azure + AI Copilots |
| Visibility | Spot ad market | $627B contracted backlog |
| Soft spot | Reality Labs $4.03B loss | PC segment down 1% |
One Owns the Model. One Rents the Rails.
Meta is vertically integrated. Zuckerberg said the quarter marked “the release of our first model from Meta Superintelligence Labs” and reiterated a plan to “deliver personal superintelligence to billions of people.” Nadella framed Microsoft’s role differently, pointing to “cloud and AI infrastructure and solutions” for the agentic era, anchored by a restructured OpenAI stake worth roughly $135 billion.
Valuation is where the divergence bites. Meta trades at roughly 18x forward earnings with a 0.80 PEG ratio, while Microsoft carries a trailing P/E of 23. Both are spending furiously: Meta guided FY26 CapEx to $125 to $145 billion, and Microsoft’s calendar 2026 CapEx is tracking toward $190 billion.
The Next Test Is Cash Flow Under CapEx Pressure
I will watch whether Meta can monetize excess AI compute by renting it out, a tactical pivot that could turn its build into near-term revenue. For Microsoft, the question is whether Azure growth can keep outrunning a CapEx line that has expanded 84% YoY. Prediction markets already reflect the strain, giving META a 75.5% probability of outvaluing OpenAI by year-end.
Why I Lean Meta Over Microsoft Right Now
If you want defensible cash flow, ad pricing power, and a discount to peers, Meta is the cleaner setup for me today. Its ad monopoly funds the AI build without leaning on a partner. Microsoft remains fundamentally sound, and the 10.67% bounce this past week suggests bargain hunters agree. But if I can only own one at these prices, Meta’s combination of 30.2% ROE and a cheaper multiple wins. I would change my view if Reality Labs losses widen materially in Q2.
Contact [email protected] for any questions or corrections.