Big Tech Earnings Strength Is Bright Light in Murky Stock Market

Wall Street had a lot riding on whether this week’s big-tech earnings would meet increasingly high expectations. By and large, the companies delivered.

Yes, the stock market finished the week on a down note with Friday’s selloff, which was in part sparked by mixed results from Amazon.com Inc. after the market closed Thursday, as well as a weak jobs report and fears about the economic impact of President Donald Trump’s sweeping global tariffs. But for the most part, investors looking for strength from technology companies to justify their market leadership found plenty of it in their reports.

“The sector is proving itself to have something like Teflon status, as fundamentals look strong, revenue growth has come in quite significantly higher than expected, and margins remain relatively healthy,” said Kevin Gordon, senior investment strategist at Charles Schwab & Co. “While things aren’t perfect, and valuations are nearing a level that has acted as a ceiling in the past, we still have a high degree of optimism, especially as we go up the market-cap spectrum.”

Alphabet Inc. started the season off last week by reporting strong sales, lifted by artificial intelligence. This week, Apple Inc. posted its strongest revenue growth in more than three years, while Meta Platforms Inc. spiked to a record as it beat expectations and outlined aggressive spending on AI. Microsoft Corp. reported robust strength in its cloud business on the back of AI demand, enough to temporarily lift it to a $4 trillion market capitalization, only the second company ever to do so. The stock has risen for 10 straight weeks, its longest streak since 2023.

Amazon was the exception, offering a tepid forecast due to relatively slow growth in its cloud-computing division and heavy investments into AI. From here, investors will turn to chip behemoth Nvidia Corp., which reports at the end of the month.