Forty years on from Microsoft’s March 13, 1986 market debut, the company remains one of the clearest examples of long-term equity compounding. A $10,000 investment made at the IPO price of $21 a share would have bought 476 whole shares, with a small amount left over in cash. After nine stock splits since listing, those original 476 shares would have turned into 137,088 shares today.
The split story
Microsoft’s stock-split history is central to the maths. The company confirms that its most recent split, effective February 18, 2003, was its ninth since going public on March 13, 1986, and that one original share became 288 shares after all nine splits. That means the IPO investor’s 476 shares would have multiplied mechanically, without any additional money invested, into 137,088 shares.
What that stake is worth now
As of the latest market data available on March 14, 2026, Microsoft shares were trading at $395.55. At that price, 137,088 shares would be worth about $54.23 million. That is slightly below some viral calculations that assume a $404 share price, but the central point remains unchanged: Microsoft’s wealth creation over four decades has been extraordinary.
Why the dividend matters
Price appreciation is only part of the story. Microsoft did not pay a regular dividend in its early years as a public company, but it later introduced one and now maintains a quarterly payout. On March 10, 2026, Microsoft declared a quarterly dividend of $0.91 per share, equivalent to an annual rate of $3.64 per share. For a holder of 137,088 shares, that would imply annual dividend income of roughly $498,000 before tax, even without reinvesting those payments.
The DRIP effect
The more dramatic version of the Microsoft story comes from dividend reinvestment. Microsoft’s investor materials note that Computershare administers a dividend reinvestment plan for the company. Widely circulated estimates now suggest that an investor who began reinvesting Microsoft dividends after the payout programme started would hold roughly 220,000 shares today. At the current share price, that would equate to around $87.0 million, and at the current annual dividend rate, about $800,800 in yearly passive income. That estimate should be treated as approximate rather than exact, because the final total depends on dividend timing, reinvestment prices and dealing assumptions over more than two decades.
The lesson for investors
Microsoft’s 40-year journey is not just a story about technology. It is a story about patience, corporate execution and the mathematics of holding exceptional businesses for a very long time. Few stocks will ever replicate this trajectory, but Microsoft shows how splits, dividends and disciplined buy-and-hold investing can transform a modest starting sum into generational wealth.
Newshub Editorial in North America – 14 March 2026
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