Strong Tech Earnings Outweigh Doubts About Further Rate Cuts in 2025

Big tech names performed strongly last week, carrying the S&P 500 into positive territory. Fears of an AI bubble are making investors wary of the breakneck pace of capital expenditures. Amazon’s (AMZN) stellar earnings after Thursday’s close indicate the capex boom is pressing on, however. Amazon Web Services (AWS), the company’s cloud computing unit, beat revenue expectations and grew its top line by 20 per cent year over year. AI model training and inference require great amounts of computing and data storage capacities, benefiting cloud businesses such as AWS. Despite accounting for 18 per cent of Amazon’s total revenue, AWS’ high margins mean the business accounts for nearly two-thirds of total operating income. AMZN was up 9.6 per cent on Friday, bringing year-to-date (YTD) returns to 11.3 per cent.

Meta Platforms (META) didn’t fare as well. Despite beating revenue expectations, Meta incurred a one-off $16 billion tax charge relating to the One Big Beautiful Bill Act. As a result, META shares declined 12.2 per cent last week, bringing YTD returns down to 11 per cent. While the tax charge was nonrecurring, the market might be sensitive to Meta’s higher overall expense profile. Capex for Q3 ($19.4B vs. $18.5B) and what management expects for the full year ($70-72B vs. $68.4B) both exceeded expectations.

Nvidia (NVDA) and Apple (AAPL) also performed well last week. NVDA advanced 8.7 per cent and became the only company ever to achieve a $5 trillion valuation. Apple was up 2.9 per cent after beating earnings expectations and announcing that it expects a double-digit year-over-year increase in iPhone sales next quarter.