11% is nothing compared to what we've lost overall on Microsoft. Microsoft went down because it lowered its earning estimates and declared it would pursue new products in different markets rather than reinvest in areas that Microsoft dominates yet are facing stiff competition. Many thought that their new products wouldn't sell very well while their successful products would be eaten away by competitors, and took their money out of Microsoft. $32 billion, to be exact. That's money Microsoft could have used for other things, like buying the nation of Paraguay.
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Microsoft went down because it lowered its earning estimates and declared it would pursue new products in different markets rather than reinvest in areas that Microsoft dominates yet are facing stiff competition. Many thought that their new products wouldn't sell very well while their successful products would be eaten away by competitors, and took their money out of Microsoft. $32 billion, to be exact. That's money Microsoft could have used for other things, like buying the nation of Paraguay.
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