- Wall Street is on the cusp of a period of intense earnings reports from large tech stocks with a total market value approaching sixteen trillion dollars. The performance of Alphabet (GOOGL:US), Microsoft (MSFT:US), Amazon (AMZN:US), and Meta Platforms (META:US) will directly test the underlying support logic of the recent all-time high reached by the S&P 500 Index (SPX).
- Against the macro backdrop of geopolitical tensions driving up energy premiums, market funds are significantly concentrated on large tech stocks with strong profit expectations. Analysis shows that the "Big Seven" are expected to see earnings growth of nineteen percent in the first quarter, significantly outpacing the twelve percent average of the remaining components of the S&P 500 Index.
- The dramatic expansion of capital expenditures and the phased pressure on free cash flow have become the core variables of institutional fund games. According to institutional estimates, the combined AI capital expenditure of the four core tech giants is expected to soar to 649 billion dollars by 2026, with Amazon potentially facing a negative free cash flow gap of 13.3 billion dollars in the first quarter.
Earnings Momentum and Valuation Reassessment
Since hitting a low point at the end of March, some core tech giant stocks have seen a valuation recovery of over twenty-five percent. After concerns and repositioning over the return cycle of AI investments, the market is reassessing the risk premium of this sector. Currently, after excluding stocks with abnormal price-to-earnings ratios, the expected P/E ratio for this tech cluster for the next twelve months has retreated to about twenty-five times, although higher than the S&P 500 Index's overall median of twenty-one times, it shows a safety margin compared to October's twenty-nine times. If the actual earnings data released this week can validate the reasonableness of this valuation level, the previously withdrawn passive allocation funds may flow back.
Capital Expenditure and Cash Flow Pressure
From a balance sheet perspective, massive investments in AI computing power infrastructure are reshaping the financial structure of tech giants. Compared to 2025's 411 billion dollars, the expected 649 billion dollars in capital expenditure for 2026 requires companies to prove that their return on invested capital can cover high financing and depreciation costs. Meta's first-quarter free cash flow is expected to shrink to 4 billion dollars, hitting a four-year low. Facing enormous spending pressures, companies like Microsoft and Meta have begun implementing stricter cost control and personnel optimization measures to cushion the marginal downward risk on profit margins. This extreme test of financial leverage will be the focus of analyst conference calls following the earnings reports.
Marginal Pricing of Cloud Computing Business
As a core observation indicator of AI commercialization landing, the revenue growth rate of the three major public cloud service providers will directly determine the short-term pricing direction of the sector. The market currently expects Amazon AWS's first-quarter revenue growth to be twenty-six percent, while Microsoft Azure and Google Cloud are expected to achieve high growth of thirty-eight percent and fifty percent, respectively. Last quarter, Azure's thirty-eight percent growth still triggered a significant stock price correction, indicating that Wall Street's pricing of cloud computing businesses has shifted from "growth-driven" to "exceeding expectations-driven." Any guidance that fails to surpass this harsh consensus could trigger a steep liquidity sell-off the day after the earnings release.