Microsoft rose 1.86% after unveiling its $2.5B Frontier AI unit.
The new unit will help enterprise clients choose and deploy AI tools.

Microsoft plans to embed 6,000 staff with clients through the unit.
The company wants clients to use flexible AI models and private data.
The move puts Microsoft deeper into the enterprise AI services race.
Microsoft (MSFT) rose 1.86% to $391.42 as the company moved to deepen its enterprise AI strategy. The stock recovered from an early dip and climbed steadily near its intraday high. The gain followed Microsoft’s plan to launch a $2.5 billion AI frontier unit.
Microsoft Corporation, MSFT
Microsoft said the new operating entity, Microsoft Frontier Company, will help businesses choose and apply AI tools. The unit will work with major clients, including Unilever and Novo Nordisk. It will focus on AI systems that support returns and improve business use cases.
The company will commit $2.5 billion to the new venture as enterprise AI demand grows. Microsoft plans to place 6,000 employees with clients through forward deployed engineering. These teams will include technical consultants, support workers, sales staff, and industry specialists.
Rodrigo Kede Lima, who has led Microsoft’s Asia business, will serve as president. The group will combine existing Microsoft AI service teams with field-based engineering support. Therefore, Microsoft wants to move beyond software sales and help clients build working AI systems.
Large companies now use several AI models instead of depending on one provider. Many businesses combine Microsoft tools, outside models, and open-source systems for specific internal needs. As a result, AI adoption has become more costly and harder to manage.
Microsoft Frontier Company will help clients select, integrate, and switch among different AI models. The unit will also connect those models with each customer’s private internal data. However, clients will keep the output and related work inside their own business systems.
Microsoft drew this approach from its own experience with Copilot and enterprise AI products. The company earlier relied heavily on OpenAI models when building its AI assistant. However, newer models from Anthropic, Google, DeepSeek, and others increased demand for flexible model choices.
Microsoft’s stock gained after the announcement, although the shares remain under pressure this year. The company has invested heavily in data centers and generative AI infrastructure. Yet some of its AI products have gained slower adoption across the business market.
The new unit also places Microsoft against Amazon, Palantir, OpenAI, Anthropic, Accenture and EY. Amazon recently committed $1 billion to a similar field engineering initiative for AI clients. Palantir has long used deployed engineering teams to serve government and enterprise customers.
Microsoft already earns revenue from enterprise support and partner services across its software business. The company reported about $2.1 billion from enterprise and partner services in the March quarter. Therefore, the Frontier unit extends an existing business model into a larger AI services push.
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