Microsoft hits a $2 trillion market valuation for the first time, second only to Apple

Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella smiles during the question and answer portion of the Microsoft Annual Shareholders Meeting at the Meydenbauer Center on November 28, 2018 in Bellevue, Washington
Microsoft CEO, Satya Nadella.

Microsoft crossed the $2 trillion market-valuation threshold on Tuesday, second only to fellow tech giant Apple in hitting that milestone.

The software maker's shares gained 1.2% on New York's Nasdaq on Tuesday, briefly reaching the multitrillion-dollar valuation. The stock closed slightly shy of that level at $265.51 per share, for a $1.96 trillion market cap. Apple's market valuation stands at $2.24 trillion.

Saudi Aramco, which went public in a record-shattering IPO in 2019, has in the past notched a $2 trillion valuation on Saudi Arabia's Tadawul exchange. But the oil titan's market cap stood at $1.88 trillion on Tuesday.

Microsoft's shares have gained 19% so far this year, outperforming tech peers Apple and Amazon. The Redmond, Washington-based company is best known for its enterprise computing software, and it is expected to announce an update to its Windows operating system this week. But the stock price rise is seen as spurred by investors betting that its lead in cloud computing places it center stage for coming global growth.

The COVID-19 pandemic accelerated technology use across the board, as people spent more time on their devices. That resulted in strong free cash flow, recurring revenues, and increasing user penetration for tech companies.

Wedbush's Dan Ives on Tuesday raised his 12-month price target for Microsoft to $325 from $310, giving it an "outperform" rating.

Microsoft's stock is up 19% year-to-date.
Microsoft's stock is up 19% year-to-date.

"With workforces expected to have a heavy remote focus, we believe the cloud shift is just beginning to take its next stage of growth globally," the tech analyst said in a note.

"We believe this disproportionally benefits the cloud stalwart out of Redmond, as Nadella & Co. are so well positioned in its core enterprise backyard to further deploy its Azure/Office 365 as the cloud backbone and artery," he added. Microsoft's board last week elected CEO Satya Nadella as its chair.

Ives noted that Amazon Web Services, Google, and IBM would also benefit, as enterprise workloads on the cloud are expected to increase from a 40% share to 55% by 2022.

Even so, some analysts have suggested tech stock valuations in general are too high and so are poised for a correction, though it's likely to be a zig-zag course rather than a straight decline.

Apple's market cap topped $2 trillion last August, becoming the first US company to reach that level. Amazon marked a $1.77 trillion valuation Tuesday, while Google parent Alphabet hit $1.67 trillion.

Read More: A stock chief at BlackRock, the world's largest asset manager, lays out an investing strategy for navigating the volatility that's coming in the second half of 2021 - and shares 3 sectors where the best opportunities lie

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