Microsoft is having a genuinely rough June. The company's stock has slid roughly 20% this month, putting it on track for its worst single-month performance since December 2000, when shares fell 24%. That's not a small footnote. That's a 26-year low point landing at the exact same moment Xbox CEO Asha Sharma is pushing through what she's calling a "reset" of the entire Xbox business.

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The numbers behind the slide
A year ago, Microsoft was sitting on a market cap of around $4 trillion. Today that figure has dropped to approximately $2.75 trillion, a decline of more than 25% over twelve months. The June drop alone is what's turning heads, though.
Here's the thing: Microsoft has continued to grow revenue and beat Wall Street estimates during this stretch. The stock isn't falling because the company is losing money. The bigger issue appears to be capital expenditure. Microsoft is pouring enormous sums into AI infrastructure, and that spending compresses free cash flow, which limits how much the company can return to shareholders through dividends and buybacks. Investors tend to punish that kind of spending when they can't see a near-term return.
Xbox, sitting inside this much larger corporate machine, is caught in the crossfire.
What the Xbox reset actually means
Sharma's reset isn't just a rebrand or a reorganization memo. The picture taking shape points to layoffs, studio closures, and game cancellations. Microsoft CFO Amy Hood has reportedly demanded savings at Xbox to offset losses, and the fiscal year ending June 30 was flagged as a key moment for when those announcements might land.
The human cost here is real. Beloved studios are reportedly on the chopping block, and staff across multiple teams are facing uncertainty. For players who've followed Xbox exclusives closely, the studio closure risk is the most alarming part of this story.
For context, that 3% figure came directly from Sharma herself. Reporter Jason Schreier noted that 3% margins aren't inherently disastrous for a business, but the comparison to Microsoft's other divisions makes the internal argument for Xbox investment a tough one to win.
Why Xbox's position inside Microsoft makes this harder
Xbox isn't a standalone company trying to survive. It's a division inside one of the world's largest corporations, and that cuts both ways. On one hand, it has access to enormous resources. On the other, it has to justify its existence against businesses like Azure and Microsoft 365, which generate margins that Xbox simply can't match.
Game Pass price hikes in 2025 led to millions of subscription cancellations, and Xbox hardware continues to sell at a fraction of PS5 and Nintendo Switch volumes. The platform's install base problem means games released as Xbox exclusives are reaching a much smaller audience, which limits revenue potential and makes the return on those billion-dollar studio acquisitions look worse by the quarter.
One scenario that's been floated is spinning Xbox out from Microsoft entirely, which would let it operate without constant comparison to the company's more profitable divisions. Whether that actually happens is unclear, but the fact that it's being discussed at all signals how serious the internal pressure has become.
What players should watch for next
With Microsoft's fiscal year closing today, June 30, any formal announcements about Xbox restructuring could come very soon. Players invested in Xbox exclusives, Game Pass value, or specific studios should keep a close eye on what gets confirmed in the coming days.
If you're gaming on Xbox hardware right now, the day-to-day experience isn't changing overnight. Games already in development are still shipping. But the longer-term slate, particularly titles from studios that might face closure, is genuinely in question.
For anyone looking to stay sharp on what's worth playing across platforms while the Xbox situation develops, the gaming guides cover everything from Battlefield REDSEC PS5 and Xbox performance settings to sport sim breakdowns like the Madden NFL 26 Super Bowl LX simulation. The games keep coming regardless of boardroom decisions, and so does the coverage.








