Microsoft announced on 26 February 2024 that it had entered a multi-year partnership with Mistral AI. The announced scope covered Azure AI supercomputing infrastructure, Mistral premium models in Azure AI Studio and Azure Machine Learning as Models-as-a-Service, and possible research collaboration for selected customer workloads, including European public-sector use cases.

Mistral AI announced the same day that Mistral Large was available through its own platform and through Azure, describing Azure as its first distribution partner for the model. That detail is the operating mechanism: Microsoft gives Mistral a route into enterprise cloud procurement, billing and deployment workflows, while Mistral gives Microsoft a stronger non-U.S. frontier-model option inside Azure's catalog.

The market context includes OpenAI, but OpenAI is not a entity in this transaction. Microsoft's Azure post says the model catalog includes OpenAI models and other commercial and open-source models; CNBC framed the move as part of Microsoft expanding its AI position beyond OpenAI. Those sources support OpenAI as background for model-portfolio strategy, not as a party to the Microsoft-Mistral relationship.

The competition boundary is also sourced. The UK Competition and Markets Authority opened and then closed a Microsoft / Mistral AI partnership case in May 2024, deciding that the arrangement did not qualify for investigation under UK merger rules. The CMA decision treated the arrangement as Azure infrastructure, model distribution, a convertible loan and possible research collaboration, while finding that it did not give Microsoft the level of influence needed for a relevant merger situation.