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Earnings Remain Resilient, but Outlook Softens

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The market loved the Microsoft MSFT and Meta Platforms META results, liked parts of the Amazon AMZN report, but didn’t like the Apple AAPL numbers. With these reports, we now have Q1 results from 6 members of the ‘Magnificent 7’ group.

The aggregate growth numbers for the group are impressive, but there is a considerable variance among the Mag 7 players. The year-over-year earnings growth rates range from -56.8% at Tesla, +4.8% from Apple, +42.6% from Amazon, and +46% from Alphabet.

The chart below shows the group’s blended Q1 earnings and revenue growth relative to what was achieved in the preceding period and what is expected in the coming three periods.

Zacks Investment Research
Zacks Investment Research


Image Source: Zacks Investment Research

The companies are sticking with their capex plans, which has remained a sticking point with market participants in recent quarters. The DeepSeek shock notwithstanding, they all see continued spending on building out their AI infrastructure as critical to their long-term competitive positioning. For some, like Alphabet’s Google search franchise, is seen as under threat in the emerging AI world, and the company remains determined to defend its territory.

Amazon, the leader in the cloud space, showed decelerating growth, which they pinned on capacity constraints in its datacenter assets. Revenues in the cloud business (Amazon Web Services) were up +16.9% to $29.3 billion, just a hair below consensus estimates. This is down from +18.9% year-over-year growth in AWS revenues in the preceding period (2024 Q4) and +19.1% in the quarter before that (2024 Q3).

In other words, a steady decelerating growth trend in the cloud unit’s revenues. The deceleration in Amazon’s cloud revenues was expected and also in line with what we had seen from Alphabet. Revenue growth trends for Microsoft’s cloud business were much better compared to what we saw from Alphabet and Amazon.

We suspect that some in the market had been hoping that Amazon’s cloud revenues would show the type of growth momentum that we saw from Microsoft. Amazon’s cloud numbers aren’t bad, but they aren’t great.

Amazon’s modestly lowered Q2 earnings guidance wasn’t tariffs-related, but rather a function of the timing of certain operating expenses. The company’s revenue guidance aligned with consensus expectations, spotlighting the resilience of the company’s business model in this challenging operating environment. This is particularly so on the retail side, where roughly half of the sellers on the site are based in China, and even the other half that are domestically based source a significant proportion of their inventory from that market. Looked at this way, Amazon’s Q2 guidance is fairly reassuring.