To get the bad news out of the way first, Alphabet – Google’s parent – delivered a beat on both top- and bottom-lines, though a notable miss on Google ad revenue, at $65.2bln in Q4 vs. consensus $65.8bln, with this segment making up the majority of the firm’s revenue. Alphabet fell as much as 7% in after-hours trade on Tuesday, while also dragging the Nasdaq 100 future around 1% lower, to a new day low, with Alphabet’s combined weight in the index amounting to around 5%.
Alphabet’s results point to an interesting theme that is likely to run through earnings season more broadly, especially for ‘big tech’ names. At face value, the results were far from disastrous, with earnings generally being rather healthy. However, given the rally that the sector has enjoyed YTD, gaining around 7%, along with steadily rising expectations, the bar for an upside earnings surprise, and thus positive stock reaction, has become a relatively high one.
This was well-evidenced by Microsoft’s report, with the largest stock by weight in both the S&P 500 and Nasdaq reporting a strong revenue beat – $62.0bln vs. $61.1bln consensus – along with a strong 30% rise in cloud sales, a key growth driver for the business. Nevertheless, while representing the 6th straight upside EPS surprise, earnings did not appear healthy enough to reach the aforementioned high bar investors have set, with the stock down around 1% after hours, perhaps due to the vast majority of cloud growth stemming from AI, implying that the rest of the revenue line continues to slow.
As mentioned, at an index level, this dragged the Nasdaq marginally lower in after-hours trade, with the index pulling back under the 17,500 handle. The recent highs at 17,750 stand as the most obvious resistance to the upside – as markets head into the plethora of upcoming event risk including the QRA, FOMC, Friday’s jobs report, and the earnings covered below. Nevertheless, even with the modest post-earnings decline, the index remains well within the uptrend in place since the market bottomed last October; not coincidentally, a bottom which came on the day of the Q4 23 quarterly refunding announcement.
Looking ahead, and sticking with earnings, a jam-packed slate of reports awaits after the market close on Thursday.
Highlights include:
As always, caveats around past performance not being a reliable predictor of future results must apply. However, earnings released thus far this week have shown that post-results upside likely requires a combination of strong earnings beats, along with optimistic guidance upgrades.
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