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- š° Amazon Crashes -8% As AWS Loses Ground
š° Amazon Crashes -8% As AWS Loses Ground
Plus, Apple falls -5.4%, the S&P has worst day since May 21, and my thoughts on big tech earnings overall...
BIG TECH EARNINGS
š Amazon and Apple Fall Over -5% After Earnings

š° The week started great with Microsoft and Metaās stellar earnings (which we covered on Thursday), but took a turn on Thursday/Friday, with all the major indexes falling this week:
Both S&P 500 and the Nasdaq-100 fell -2.5%, with the S&P having itās worst trading day yesterday since May 21st
The TSX fell -1.7%
And even Bitcoin fell -4.5% since Monday
š· Now, Apple and Amazon werenāt to blame for the overall market, with most experts pinning that on a poor jobs report showing signs of a weakening economy.
ā And this wasnāt just a ābadā jobs report. According to CNN, it was the āworst major economic report since the end of the pandemicā with US jobs growing by only 73,000 this month (compared to forecasts of about ~100,000).
š In fact, they were so bad that in a rare move, Trump fired the Bureau of Labor Statistics Commissioner, saying āI think their numbers are wrongā and āwere RIGGED to make the Republicans, and ME, look badā.
š But while the market fell, Apple and Amazon fell harder:
Amazon ($AMZN) plummeted -8%
Apple ($AAPL) fell -5.4%
š So, following up on our coverage of Microsoft and Meta, letās look at whatās going on with Amazon and Apple and why they crashed while the others soaredā¦
š” P.S. Even if you donāt hold any Amazon or Apple and only hold the S&P 500, 10% of your portfolio is invested in these two stocks based on their weighting in the index!
š Amazon Crashes -8% Despite Earnings and Revenue Beats

š¤ Ok, so what went wrong with Amazon? Well, letās look at the high-level numbers:
ā Revenue was $167.7B, up 13% from last year and 3.5% higher than expected
ā Earnings per Share was $1.68, 26% higher than expected
š Looking at the specific business lines:
šļø Online shopping revenue was $61.5B, up 11% from last year
š£ Advertising revenue was $15.7B, up 23% from last year
š¤ And AI-driven Amazon Web Services was $30.9B, up 17% from last year
šÆ Now with those numbers, you wouldnāt expect to see such a massive stock drop, but with earnings the forecasts are often more important than the quarterly results themselves⦠and for the upcoming quarter, Amazon said it expects operating income to land between $15.5 billion and $20.5 billion, with the low end falling well below analysts expectations of $19.5 billion.
š“ But that wasnāt the only red spot for Amazonā¦
š AWS Growth āWeakā Compared to Microsoft Azure and Google Cloud
Josh Schafer, a Senior Markets Reporter, summed up Amazonās problem:
āIn a vacuum itās a good number, but next to Microsoft it looks bad.ā
š With Microsoft Azure up +26% from last year, and Google Cloud up +32%, AWSās +17% revenue growth pales in comparison.
š” And while AWS is only 18% of Amazonās total revenues, it makes up 53% of its Operating Income and is the core element to Amazonās AI story.
āļø Weāve been covering the āCloud Warsā for over a year now, and this quarter, the cracks are really starting to show in Amazonās moat. While they were once the dominant player, theyāve been steadily losing market share to Google and Microsoft over the past few years, with growth falling flat as Google and Microsoft see accelerated growth:

(P.S. The above chart is from Fiscal AI, an awesome AI-powered fundamental research tool. Check it out here)
š¤š° AI Spending Galore
š° Carrying on the pattern set by Meta and Microsoft, Amazon also recorded a massive capex expense of $31.4B, up 31% from last quarter and more than Meta, Microsoft, and Google.
⨠While Amazon CEO Andy Jassy didnāt offer many specifics, he said that AI has improved operational efficiency and business growth, and that generative AI has contributed multiple billions of dollars to AWS.
š While the impact seems to still be small in comparison to the massive spending on data centres and Nvidia GPUs, Jassy says itās still āvery early daysā in AI development and adoption, indicating that the company has no plans to slow down spending anytime soon.
š Speaking of AI spending, thereās been one tech giant thatās been largely on the sidelines as Microsoft, Meta, Google, and Amazon dump billions into AI Infrastructure: Appleā¦
So letās take a look at Appleās earnings and then take a step back and look at the common themes among Big Tech earnings this week, but first, a quick word from todayās sponsor, Purpose Investments!
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BIG TECH EARNINGS
š Apple Falls -5.4% Despite Biggest Revenue Growth Since 2021

āļø Similar to Amazon, despite the stock drop, Apple recorded pretty stellar numbers this quarter:
ā Revenue was $94B, up 10% from last year and 5% better than analysts expected
ā Earnings per Share was $1.57, 9.8% better than expected
And most notably:
š± iPhone Revenue was $44.6B, up 13% from last year and a massive 11% better than analysts expected.
šØš³ China sales also grew 4% to $15.4B
Both of these points reversed trends from last quarter when iPhone growth was mostly flat and China sales fell -2.3%⦠In Tim Cookās words:
āIt was an exceptional quarter by any measureā
š Tariffs Not As Bad As Expected
āļø Another bright spot this quarter was tariff losses, with only a $800M hit this quarter compared to the $900M expected. However, Apple is still getting hit hard by tariffs, with a $1.1B cost expected for 2025.
š¤ The Big AI Questionā¦
š¤ So with such a great quarter why is the stock falling?
š¤ Well everyone in Big Techās been spending big at the AI party⦠except Apple⦠and investors are starting to grow inpatient.
With Microsoft and Amazon ramping up capex to over $30B a quarter, Apple spent a measly $3.5B. As one commentator puts it:
āAppleās strong quarter masks a lack of true innovation, with growth driven by discounts and buybacks rather than visionary investment or product breakthroughs.ā
š Tim Cookās Pep Talk
Apple CEO Tim Cook clearly knows this is a major issue, saying previously that āAI is one of the most profound technologies of our lifetimeā.
In fact, just Friday, Apple held a rare all-hands meeting, gathering staff and telling them the AI revolution is āas big or biggerā than the internet, smartphones, cloud computing and apps. Referring to AI, Tim Cook said:
āApple must do this. Apple will do this. This is sort of ours to grab. We will make the investment to do itā
Many beleive Apple will have to acquire its way to catch up to its peers, and Tim Cook confirmed that Apple is āvery open to M&A that accelerates our AI roadmap.ā
š” My Thoughts on Apple & Big Tech Earnings overall

š This will be my 82nd Weekly Buzz, with now over 160,000 words written and over 400 hours spent covering primarily the Big Tech companies.
š” So as we wrap up earnings week, I feel Iām in a good position to observe the common themes both over this quarter and over the past ~2 years.
š Here are some of my observations:
One obvious winner of the week, although they didnāt record earnings, was Nvidia ($NVDA). Microsoft, Alphabet, Amazon, and Meta are all rapidly increasing capex as the AI arms race continues to heat up (spending $95B this quarter compared to <$30B in 2021). As long as this continues, Nvidia will continue to benefit big.
Meta, Microsoft, Alphabet, and Amazon have all solidified and doubled down on their AI strategies (see image below) while Apple is still struggling to find its place in the race. All companies beleive AI is still in the early stages.

Personally, I own Nvidia, Meta, and Microsoft (making up 21% of my portfolio). For the past 6 months, these have significantly outperformed the rest of Mag 7 and I continue to beleive these 3 are the strongest of the 7 after this quarter. Over the past 6 months:
Nvidia is up +49%
Microsoft is up +28%
Meta is up +8%
Google is down -6%
Amazon is down -10%
Apple is down -11%
Tesla is down -21%
Can the good times continue? While AI has certainly driven significant profit growth, it still hasnāt been enough to keep pace with the spending spree. Despite this, investors have rewarded the spending with higher valuations, so to some, it has created a bit of a āspeculative frenzyā in the market.
I also worry that, while AI definitely seems to be transformative, the hype and āspend at all costsā mentality do seem to resemble the dot-com bubble era, and so even though I beleive in the long-term potential, I worry the market will continue to be very volatile in the near term.
The challenge with a āspeculative frenzyā is that if youāre in one, itās nearly impossible to know how long it could last. Many commentators were saying the market was in a bubble 2 years ago.
A very interesting dynamic of the current markets (that makes it a bit different than dot-com) is that when there is a dip, retail investors (like you and me) rush to buy, which has softened many of the pullbacks from institutional investors dumping stock.
As for me, I plan to stay the course and continue holding some of my favourite tech stocks while increasing my portfolio diversification to hedge against the volatility (i.e., with my recent buy of ZEA to boost my international exposure).
š¼ But as always, Iām very curious to hear what you all have to say! I just made a post on Blossom about my thoughts above, so feel free to comment there to share your thoughts and join the discussion!
š P.S. For those who are new to the Buzz my name is Max and Iām the author of the newsletter + the CEO of Blossom! Feel free to check out my portfolio and trades on Blossom or follow me on Instagram where I post market news recap videos!
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