Stock Markets April 27, 2026 10:13 AM

Microsoft and OpenAI Restructure Commercial Tie-Up, Analyst Says

Amended agreement removes certain exclusivity and revenue-share mechanics while preserving long-term licensing and strategic alignment

By Ajmal Hussain MSFT
Microsoft and OpenAI Restructure Commercial Tie-Up, Analyst Says
MSFT

Evercore ISI analyst Kirk Materne said the revised partnership between Microsoft and OpenAI simplifies the commercial arrangement, grants both firms more operational flexibility, and clarifies economic and intellectual property timelines through 2030-2032. Microsoft gives up exclusive selling rights and will no longer pay revenue share on OpenAI products it resells on its cloud, while OpenAI can distribute across any cloud provider and continues to remit revenue share to Microsoft through 2030 subject to a cap.

Key Points

  • Microsoft will stop paying revenue share on OpenAI products it resells on its cloud, and has given up exclusive sales rights.
  • OpenAI can distribute its products across any cloud provider; Microsoft retains a non-exclusive IP license through 2032 and remains a preferred strategic partner.
  • Contract language removes AGI-linked triggers and sets IP and revenue-share timelines through 2032 and 2030 respectively, with a cap on revenue sharing.

Evercore ISI analyst Kirk Materne on Monday offered an assessment of the updated commercial agreement between Microsoft and OpenAI, describing the changes as a simplification of the relationship that grants both parties additional flexibility.

Under the revised terms, Microsoft will stop paying a revenue share on OpenAI products that Microsoft resells through its cloud platform. Microsoft also relinquished its exclusive right to be the sole seller of OpenAI's AI models.

Materne said the new structure swaps some exclusivity for clearer economics and operational latitude. From Microsoft's perspective, the arrangement provides greater clarity, flexibility and economic certainty, while OpenAI obtains wider market access for its products.

Key legal and commercial milestones were also clarified in the new contract language, according to the analyst. Language linking commercial terms to AGI-related triggers appears to have been removed from the framework. The agreement now sets out defined cutoff dates for intellectual property access through 2032 and constrains revenue share economics through 2030 with a cap.

"We do not believe this revised agreement should come as a major surprise to investors at this point, as Microsoft has increasingly signaled interest in a broader multi model strategy, while OpenAI has clear incentives to expand distribution more broadly across the market," Materne said.

Under the amended terms, OpenAI is permitted to serve its products on any cloud provider, meaning Azure is no longer the exclusive avenue for distribution and deployment. Microsoft retains a license to use OpenAI intellectual property through 2032, but that license is now non-exclusive.

On the financial side of the deal, Microsoft will cease remitting revenue share to OpenAI for products it resells on its cloud. Conversely, OpenAI's revenue share payments to Microsoft will continue at the same percentage through 2030, though those payments are now subject to a cap.

Materne observed that the document's removal of AGI terminology and AGI-triggered clauses should reduce an element of prior investor uncertainty. Despite the reduced exclusivity, Materne noted Microsoft remains the anchor commercial and infrastructure partner in the relationship and retains long-term access to OpenAI technology as part of the revised agreement.

Evercore ISI continues to hold an Outperform rating on Microsoft shares and has a $580 price target on the stock.


Summary

The updated Microsoft-OpenAI deal streamlines how the companies will work together commercially. Microsoft gives up exclusivity and the obligation to pay revenue share on OpenAI products it resells on the cloud, while OpenAI can distribute across multiple cloud providers and will continue revenue share payments to Microsoft through 2030 with a cap. The agreement preserves Microsoft's strategic role and a non-exclusive IP license through 2032, and removes AGI-linked language from the commercial framework.

Key points

  • Microsoft will no longer pay revenue share on OpenAI products it resells on its cloud - impacts cloud infrastructure and software distribution models.
  • OpenAI gains the right to deliver products across any cloud provider, broadening market distribution - impacts cloud services and SaaS deployment strategies.
  • Contract clarifications include IP access through 2032 and capped revenue-share economics through 2030; Microsoft retains a preferred strategic role despite reduced exclusivity.

Risks and uncertainties

  • Removal of exclusivity changes competitive dynamics in cloud infrastructure and AI platform markets, potentially affecting Azure's competitive positioning.
  • Cap on revenue-sharing and the cessation of Microsoft payments for resold OpenAI products could alter revenue flows for both cloud services and AI product monetization strategies.
  • Elimination of AGI-linked commercial triggers reduces one source of prior investor uncertainty, but leaves open how future technological developments might affect commercial terms beyond 2030-2032.

Risks

  • Reduced exclusivity may alter competitive dynamics for cloud providers and affect Azure's positioning in cloud infrastructure markets.
  • Changes to revenue-share mechanics - Microsoft not paying revenue share for resold products while OpenAI continues payments through 2030 with a cap - could impact cloud and AI monetization models.
  • While AGI-linked language was removed, future technological developments beyond the 2030-2032 timeframes could introduce new commercial uncertainties.

More from Stock Markets

Amsterdam market dips as tech, telecoms and energy drag AEX down 1.15% Apr 27, 2026 Portuguese Market Closes Higher as Utilities, Consumer Goods and Basic Materials Lead Gains Apr 27, 2026 Madrid Stocks Tick Up Mildly at Close as Energy and Tech Names Lead Gains Apr 27, 2026 U.K. equities slip as mining, autos and telecom stocks weigh on market Apr 27, 2026 Belgian Stocks Close Higher as Technology, Materials and Consumer Goods Gain Apr 27, 2026