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Microsoft is past its glory days and the stock is a sell, says º£½ÇÊÓÆµ fund manager

Liontrust's innovation fund team, which is made up of Clare Pleydell-Bouverie, Storm Uru, and Jamie Clark, told City AM that they sold out of the tech giant's shares in the fund's portfolio

Users are experiencing problems accessing Microsoft 365 services (Image: Getty Images)

Liontrust's Innovation Fund team has made a bold prediction that contradicts the common belief about leading tech stocks, stating that Microsoft, one of the globe's most valuable companies, may not be a long-term victor, according to a º£½ÇÊÓÆµ fund manager.

Storm Uru and Clare Pleydell-Bouverie, co-managers of Liontrust's Innovation Fund, informed City AM that they no longer possess any of the tech behemoth's shares in the fund's portfolio – a daring move at a time when the software titan is a dominant force in benchmarks and investor portfolios alike, as reported by .

"We sold out of Microsoft after six years" Pleydell-Bouverie declared. "We don't think the Windows operating system is necessarily in this age of what we call software 2.0 – built on accelerated compute infrastructure."

The firm is currently underweight, five of the seven so-called magnificent seven mega-cap tech names. Uru and Pleydell-Bouverie contended that this decision is driven by a fundamental rethink of who will lead in the AI age.

"The winners over the next decade will be different from the last decade," Uru stated.

AI could harm Microsoft

According to Liontrust, Microsoft – and legacy tech more broadly – is being squeezed by a faster innovation cycle and fresh new AI-native competitors.

The fund's managers point to a "collapse" in product development timelines driven by advances in chip architecture and software automation.

"When you have a doubling of the rate of innovation from the linchpin of the ecosystem, that means everyone around you had to respond or be left behind," Pleydell-Bouverie told City AM. "We're already starting to see that – look at Intel."