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Xbox pulls plug on Copilot, so why is Microsoft stock surging?

Microsoft stock (NASDAQ: MSFT) is getting rewarded for doing something that looks backwards: backing away from AI.

On Tuesday, new Xbox chief Asha Sharma said the company would wind down Copilot on mobile and stop developing it for console.

The development is a reversal of plans that had pointed to a 2026 Xbox rollout. The market’s reaction captures the oddity of the moment.

In a tech sector that has spent two years stuffing AI into everything, investors seem to like a company that can say no to the wrong AI feature.

Sharma, who took over the gaming unit in February, framed the move as part of a broader reset to “get the business back on track.”

The feature nobody actually wanted

Copilot for Gaming began life as a beta on the Xbox mobile app in June 2025, where Microsoft pitched it as a “gaming sidekick” that could coach players and help them move faster through games.

Xbox said at the time that it would come to PC soon and later to the ROG Xbox Ally handheld.

By March 2026, Microsoft was still describing a current-generation console rollout as part of its plan.

That rollout is now cancelled, and the mobile version is being wound down too.

That matters because this was never a flagship product with a loyal user base. It was a feature looking for a reason to exist.

For players, the reaction was mostly indifference or irritation.

For Microsoft, the truth was that the assistant had become a distraction before it ever became a real business.

Killing it before it reached hardware is the kind of move investors often read as discipline, not retreat.

Also read: What can power Microsoft stock higher after earnings stumble?

Surgical reset

In the memo quoted by The Verge, Sharma said Xbox needs to move faster, deepen its connection with the community and address friction for both players and developers.

She also said the company had promoted leaders who helped build Xbox while bringing in new voices, and that features not aligned with the new direction would be retired.

The same day, Microsoft also added executives from its CoreAI team into the Xbox side of the business.

That fits Sharma’s broader pattern since replacing Phil Spencer in February.

Microsoft has already scrapped the Microsoft Gaming brand and cut the price of Xbox Game Pass.

Why is Microsoft stock surging?

Microsoft’s stock move makes more sense when you look at what Wall Street tends to reward: lower waste, faster decisions and a cleaner story.

First, ending a product before a full rollout saves money. Second, Sharma’s timing signals that she is willing to make hard calls quickly.

Third, the move does not weaken Microsoft’s main AI thesis as Microsoft 365 Copilot now has 20 million paid seats, up from 15 million in January, and that the company has also won a major rollout at Accenture.

That is the sort of AI adoption investors care about because it looks like revenue, not just branding.

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