26_CHCA_Big Tech

Big Tech earnings week: Can the AI spending pay off?

Equities 5 minutes to read
Charu Chanana 400x400
Charu Chanana

Chief Investment Strategist

Key points:

  • AI is still the market’s biggest equity storyline — and this week is the stress test. Microsoft, Meta, Tesla and Apple report on Wed/Thu. All four stocks are down year-to-date, so patience is thinner and the bar is higher.
  • The market reaction will be less about “did you mention AI?” and more about “did you justify the bill?” If results disappoint or spending plans jump, the market may struggle to defend lofty index-level valuations without a fresh narrative.
  • These four are running four different AI playbooks. That’s why this week is useful: it helps investors decide whether 2026 is about AI infrastructure, AI monetisation, or AI promises that still need proof.


The lens: Capex vs cash generation

A simple way to compare the strategies is to look at capital spending versus free cash flow (cash left after capex). The key point isn’t that capex is high, it is whether cash generation and profit quality can keep up.

Apple = cash machine + capex discipline.

Apple throws off enormous cash while keeping capex relatively restrained (low single-digit % of revenue). That combination underpins aggressive shareholder returns and gives Apple flexibility if it decides to lean harder into on-device AI. The other watchpoint here is whether iPhone and China dynamics show renewed momentum into 2026.

Microsoft & Meta = the big spenders, but with big engines.

Both are spending heavily, yet they’re also highly profitable. That’s why their calls matter most for the broader AI complex: it’s not just what they spent, it’s how confidently they can explain returns, utilisation, pricing power and timelines.

Tesla = the fragile cash-flow story with the most optionality hype.

Tesla is not a heavy capex spender, but it also doesn’t have the margin cushion of the others. The market tends to trade Tesla on the gap between today’s car business and tomorrow’s autonomy/robotics vision. That makes guidance language and future claims unusually price-sensitive.


What each print could mean for the AI trade

1) Microsoft: the AI data-centre reality check

  • The market’s skepticism has shifted to “how much capacity is too much?” and “what’s the payback period?”
  • Microsoft’s commentary effectively sets the tone for how investors think about the AI cloud build-out.
  • Watch for clarity on:
    • AI contribution to cloud growth (is AI accelerating Azure in a measurable way?)
    • Pricing and demand (real backlog/usage signals vs vague enthusiasm)
    • Capex trajectory and constraints (power, water, permitting, and local pushback can be real friction points)

2) Meta: AI monetisation still mostly ads

  • Meta’s bull case is that AI improves ad targeting and ROI, keeping the ad engine strong enough to fund big model spending.
  • However, lack of a cloud business means Meta’s monetisation remains slower.
  • Watch for:
    • Evidence AI is lifting ad efficiency (that’s the tangible payoff investors like)
    • Any movement from “AI supports ads” to “AI is a product line” (so far, monetisation is still thin)

3) Apple: the “capex-light” giant — can AI become an upgrade cycle?

  • Apple doesn’t need to outspend everyone to win; its lever is distribution (installed base) and services attach.
  • If Apple can tie AI to a credible demand cycle, it broadens the AI trade beyond data centres and chips.
  • Watch for:
    • Whether Apple frames AI as a device refresh catalyst, a services story, or merely table-stakes
    • Any signs of China stabilisation/recovery supporting top-line momentum
    • Ongoing capital discipline (Apple’s “AI strategy” can be as much about integration as spending)

4) Tesla: margins vs moonshots

  • Tesla’s near-term fundamentals (auto demand, pricing, margins) sit awkwardly next to its long-duration AI narrative (robotaxis/robots).
  • Watch for:
    • How management bridges the credibility gap between current earnings power and future autonomy timelines
    • Any tangible milestones (not just “next year” promises)
    • Whether the market continues to reward aspiration more than delivery


The second-order impacts

If investors signal they’re tiring of “spend now, profit later,” it can ripple through:

  • Chip stocks & AI hardware, due to lack of demand visibility and high capex sensitivity
  • Utilities & power infrastructure plays, as the “AI power demand” narrative is capex-dependent
  • Macro confidence, given AI capex has been one of the cleaner explanations for resilient US growth pockets


Scenarios and possible market outcomes

1) High capex, ROI credibility improves: Spend stays heavy but proof shows up (pricing/utilisation/margins)

Likely impact: AI leaders hold, index sentiment steadies.

2) High capex, ROI doesn’t improve: Spend stays heavy with vague monetisation/margin pressure

Likely impact: De-rating risk for AI complex, rotation to earnings certainty.

3) Capex moderates: Market may read it as demand cooling/peak build-out

Likely impact: Chips/utilities/data-centre chain weak; broader wobble if growth impulse fades.

4) Earnings miss + guidance cautious: Near-term results disappoint and outlook turns careful

Likely impact: Risk-off, “high valuations need a new story” moment.


Bottom line

This week decides whether AI stays a capex-led growth story or becomes a cash-flow discipline story. If the prints don’t show improving ROI, or if capex guidance spooks, markets could get more nervous not just about the AI supply chain and utilities, but there may also be some impact on broader S&P valuations that have been riding the AI halo.


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