Earnings Coming in Better-Than-Expected As Peak Season Begins

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The Magnificent 7 kicked off fourth quarter reporting in a similar fashion to the Q3 season. Tesla once again missed expectations when they reported on Wednesday, on both the top and bottom-line this time (vs. only missing on revenues in Q3), yet investors seemed unbothered.[1] While the stock initially fell, it ended up ~8% by the end of the week. After struggling through the first half of 2024, Tesla's shares began to improve in the second half of the year, and then rose even more after Donald Trump was elected US president in November. Tesla's CEO Elon Musk's close relationship with the president and his position as the leader of the newly created Department of Government Efficiency, has led investors to believe there are more favorable policies and less oversight of EV companies which would benefit Tesla.[2]

Microsoft also followed a similar pattern to last quarter, beating on the top and bottom-line, but issuing light revenue guidance once again which led to investors taking the stock down over 9% in the following trading session. The only name to buck the trend on Wednesday was Meta, while softening user growth led to a decline in the stock after the Q3 report, the company impressed shareholders in Q4 by reporting a 21% increase in quarterly revenue.[3] Furthermore, Meta's continued investments in artificial intelligence throughout its social media properties appears to be paying off, and further investments to the tune of $60 - $65B are planned this year.[4] CEO Mark Zuckerberg said he expects Meta AI to reach a billion users in 2025.[5]

Apple continued the party on Thursday, reporting revenues that grew 4% YoY thanks to a boost from the Services segment.[6] This as well as a guidance for low to mid single digit sales growth for their fiscal Q2 helped investors look past the continuing deceleration of iPhone sales, mostly due to weakness in China.[7] The stock rose 3% after the report.

But all wasn't well in AI land last week, as Chinese-based DeepSeek unexpectedly released a cheaper, more nimbly built generative AI tool akin to ChatGPT.[8] Details on how it was built are still being sorted, but it came at the expense of Nvidia shares which tumbled 17% by the end of the US trading day last Monday. This marked the largest one-day percentage loss for NVDA going back to March 2020, but the market cap loss of $600B was the steepest in US history.[9] Nvidia will report Q4 earnings on February 26.

Overall the Q4 earnings season continues to come in better-than-expected. That has thrust quarterly growth to 13.2% according to FactSet, the best rate in three years, with revenue growth trailing behind at 5%.[10]