Big Tech Just Had Its Best Quarter In Years. So Why Is The Market Still Nervous?

Big Tech crushed Q1 2026 earnings with 27% profit growth, yet markets remain anxious as investors demand perfection.

depositphotos_13528475-stock-photo-database-table.jpg
Source: DepositPhotos

What happens when the biggest problem facing tech stocks is not poor earnings... but impossible expectations?

That is the true story of Q1 2026 earnings season.

On the surface, tech stocks just delivered one of their best earnings reports in recent memory. But beneath the headlines, something even more interesting is occurring: artificial intelligence is driving a huge divide within the tech sector itself. Some stocks are about to enter an accelerated growth cycle. Other stocks are quietly being left behind.

And now, with Nvidia (NVDA) set to report earnings tonight, we're finally going to see if the bull run in artificial intelligence can keep going... or whether the tech market has become too optimistic about its future growth.

If you're invested in tech stocks right now, then this is the earnings briefing you need.

The Earnings Season That Changed Wall Street's Expectations

The numbers were astounding.

Despite more than 90% of S&P 500 companies having already reported Q1 2026 earnings, profit growth is currently tracking to near 27% growth year over year – double what Wall Street expected heading into earnings season.

That means this has been the best quarterly earnings growth period since 2021.

And with roughly 83% of S&P 500 companies having beaten their forecasts this quarter, that number has actually been even higher than usual.

Then why is the market still nervous?

Because earnings beats do not matter.

Investors no longer want just good results. They want perfection.

S&P 500 companies that missed expectations have fallen short of market indices by almost 5% in the day following earnings. By contrast, companies that beat estimates managed only a modest 1% gain.

Why?

Because strong earnings are already baked in.

The market is now assuming AI-driven growth will continue accelerating.

And that makes the next few days very important.

The Big Tech Earnings Scorecard: Who Really Won?

The most intense earnings battle took place the week of April 29th, when Microsoft (MSFT), Alphabet (GOOGL), Amazon (AMZN), and Meta (META) all released earnings on consecutive days before Apple (AAPL) did on the fifth.

But despite all of them having performed well in terms of earnings growth, not all big tech stocks impressed investors.

Metric

Alphabet

Amazon

Microsoft

Apple

Meta

Q1 2026 Revenue

$109.9B

$181.5B

$82.9B

$111.2B

$56.31B

Revenue Growth YoY

+22%

+17%

+18%

+17%

+33%

Core AI / Cloud Segment

Google Cloud

AWS

Azure

Services Ecosystem

AI Advertising & Infrastructure

AI / Cloud Growth

Google Cloud +63%

AWS +28%

Azure +40%

Services margins ~77%

Ad revenue + AI monetization acceleration

Earnings Highlight

Net income +81%

EPS nearly doubled estimates

AI business ARR reached $37B

EPS +22%, China sales +28%

Daily active users hit 3.58B

AI Infrastructure Spending

2026 capex guide: $180B–$190B

Planning over $200B capex

Projected ~$190B capex

Roughly $13B annual capex

$115B–$135B AI capex guide

Investor Reaction

Biggest winner of earnings season

Positive but underhyped

Strong results but muted reaction

Investors split on AI positioning

Stock dropped nearly 7% post-earnings

Biggest Investor Concern

Rising AI spending intensity

Can margins hold during massive expansion?

OpenAI exclusivity ending

Is Apple falling behind in AI?

Spending rising faster than monetization

Main Bullish Thesis

Fastest-growing hyperscaler with huge AI backlog

AWS becoming backbone of AI infrastructure

Enterprise AI dominance

Massive profitability with low capex

Unmatched scale for AI-driven advertising

Key Market Narrative

AI strategy clearly working

Quiet AI infrastructure giant

Great results no longer enough

Efficiency vs AI race debate

Market demanding faster AI returns

1-    Alphabet was the Clear Winner

Alphabet delivered one of the strongest quarters of the bunch.

Its Google Cloud business generated a remarkable 63% year-over-year growth to $20 billion, which accelerates dramatically from 48% growth in Q4 2025, and now makes Google Cloud the fastest-growing hyperscaler in this cycle.

Why?

Because Alphabet proved yet again that its entire AI strategy is working.

From custom AI chips to an ever-growing backlog of orders, a strong search engine ad market, to cloud acceleration, everything is pointing to one thing:

Alphabet is becoming one of the leading AI infrastructure companies on Earth.

And investors can tell.

2-    Amazon Quietly Built an AI Advantage of its Own

AWS growth soared by 28% year over year to $37.6 billion.

It's the strongest cloud growth Amazon has seen in 13 consecutive quarters.

Advertising revenues rose 23%.

But the real story is infrastructure.

All major AI labs use AWS computing power, while Amazon is planning to spend over $200 billion in capex in the upcoming year in anticipation of growing AI demand.

Here's the question investors need to answer now:

Could Amazon become one of the biggest AI infrastructure leaders without drawing the same investor attention as Nvidia and Microsoft?

3-    Microsoft had excellent results, but not good enough for Markets

In Q1 2026, Microsoft delivered Azure growth of 40% and total revenue of $82.9 billion.

Historically, such numbers would've generated a monumental rally.

But this time, investors responded quite tepidly.

Why?

Because Microsoft suddenly appeared somewhat underwhelming compared to Alphabet's growth in its cloud services.

Not only did Microsoft end its exclusive partnership with OpenAI, giving its competitor free access to all its frontier models until 2032, but it also made many investors question:

Is Microsoft's dominance in AI over now?

4-    Apple Stock May Be the Most Exciting One to Watch in Tech This Year

Apple delivered arguably the best results of the season.

Q1 2026 saw total revenue grow 17% to $111.2 billion, and EPS jump by 22%. Greater China sales skyrocketed by 28% to $20.5 billion, and the company's services segment maintained its acceleration with gross margins staying at about 77%.

However, investors' eyes cannot stop looking at a single number:

Apple managed all of this while spending no more than $13 billion per year on capex investments.

How does that compare to Microsoft's projected $190 billion, and Amazon's $200 billion AI buildout in the year ahead?

Now investors have to decide for themselves:

Was Apple able to generate spectacular results while saving billions over its competitors' costs in AI infrastructure projects?

Or is the technology giant quietly lagging in AI development?

This question will define Apple's valuation in the coming two years.

5-    Meta Revealed Investors' Biggest Fear in AI

Meta delivered excellent results once again with 33% y-o-y and $56.31 billion in revenue.

Ad growth stayed robust, while daily active users reached a staggering 3.58 billion users.

But investors ignored the positive numbers, fixating their sights on expenses.

Meta said it plans to spend between $115 billion to $135 billion building AI infrastructure next year alone.

The stock dropped almost 7% after earnings.

That move reveals something important about today's market: investors only reward heavy AI spending when returns rise faster than costs.

If spending is outpacing monetization, investors punish the companies involved ruthlessly. 

AI Is Creating an Emerging Class of Winners and Losers Among Tech Stocks

Another trend emerging during this earnings season is the huge performance discrepancy between technology stocks.

Since the start of Q1 2026 earnings, there has been a difference of 133 percentage points between the top-performing and worst-performing stocks in technology this year.

The gap is widening. Three years ago, the discrepancy between tech stocks barely reached 75 points.

The time of AI lifting the entire industry is over. Now, some companies are starting to emerge as leaders in this field.

The Winners: Tech Stocks Focused on Hardware and Semiconductors

As you would probably expect, the winners this earnings season include companies focusing on AI infrastructure development.

SanDisk shares are up a whopping 511% YTD. Intel (INTC) delivered blowout Q1 results, which pushed its revenue up over 225%. Seagate Technology (STX) and Western Digital (WDC) have soared by roughly 194% and 183%, respectively.

VanEck Semiconductor ETF (SMH) has surged by 58% YTD, too.

image.png

Image Source: Morningstar 

Why? Artificial intelligence needs a lot of semiconductors, chip memory, networking, and storage solutions to process massive amounts of data.

The Losers: AI-Destroyed Software Companies

The software sector has experienced massive pain this earnings season.

Over 75% of stocks in the Morningstar US Technology Index are negative in 2026.

HubSpot's (HUBS) stock price is down almost 50%. Atlassian's (TEAM) shares are down about 47%. Workday (WDAY) has dropped by roughly 44%.

image.png

Image Source: Morningstar 

Why? Because more and more software investors are worrying about AI potentially disrupting their companies' business models.

That may end up being overly pessimistic. After all, many analysts predict that software companies will simply adapt to new technologies.

But for investors in technology stocks, that means taking a chance.

Holding a broadly diversified tech stock ETF no longer means getting great exposure to AI innovation. Many of those indexes now contain software stocks that can significantly drag down AI's gains.

The First Phase of Artificial Intelligence IPO Boom Is Here

The next phase of the AI growth cycle is starting now with several IPOs.

Last week, Cerebras Systems debuted on Nasdaq in what's shaping up to be the biggest tech IPO since Uber's (UBER) initial listing in 2019.

The company raised $5.55 billion, opening its trading at $350 per share, and closing with a 68% increase to a valuation of about $95 billion.

Cerebras builds AI-focused wafer-scale processors for inferencing purposes – the area investors worry could soon become AI's main bottleneck.

But besides signing a $20 billion cloud deal with OpenAI and a massive infrastructure contract with Amazon Web Services, the company faces competition from Nvidia, and poses real customer concentration risks.

Investors should therefore be careful.

But there's another message the market wants to send clearly:

The appetite for AI companies listed on the Nasdaq remains immense.

And the IPO pipeline ahead with Databricks, OpenAI, Anthropic, and Elon Musk's SpaceX xAI company merger could soon provide us with the biggest wave of tech listings in years.

Nvidia Earnings Could Decide the Future of All AI-Related Stocks

The coming earnings season will hinge on Nvidia's performance.

The street predicts the tech titan will deliver adjusted EPS of about $1.77, and a revenue number of $78.9 billion for this quarter, both implying over 79% YOY growth.

But what truly caught everyone's attention is Nvidia's Q1 data center revenue, predicted to exceed $73.3 billion, which is a near 87% rise from last year.

And with analysts predicting Nvidia's FY 2027 revenues reaching almost $370 billion (about 71% growth), tonight's earnings become extremely crucial.

Why?

Because the market stopped caring about earnings misses long ago.

They assume Nvidia will beat analysts' expectations.

But tonight they'll want to see something different:

strong guidance for future earnings driven by Nvidia's Blackwell AI chips, hyperscaler demand, and AI spending in infrastructure.

The Two Risks Facing Nvidia and All Artificial Intelligence-Linked Companies

But there are two other problems tech stocks are facing right now.

Rising bond yields and crude oil prices.

Yields on the 10-year and 30-year US Treasuries have climbed to 4.6% and 5.2%, respectively. 30-Year US Treasury hit its highest level in 19 years since 2007.

image.png

Oil prices are also on the rise due to Strait of Hormuz supply issues, now pushing them above $100 per barrel. This is fuelling fears of renewed inflation and potential tightening by the Federal Reserve.

Why is this relevant?

Because rising bond yields hurt companies valued primarily on their future growth, cutting down the present value of their future cash flows.

That is why the Nasdaq fell, and several stocks in the Magnificent Seven declined despite posting blowout results.

That leaves two risks investors must consider while watching Nvidia's earnings:

Will the AI growth narrative remain intact for investors? Can artificial intelligence momentum offset rising bond yields?

If Nvidia's guidance for FY 2027 turns out solid and positive for investors with news on Blackwell AI chips, hyperscalers' demands, and AI infrastructure spending... Then, Nvidia's decline after the report will create another buying opportunity for premium artificial intelligence stocks.

But if Nvidia fails to impress, rising bond yields can spark a much deeper correction among the entire class of AI tech stocks.

STOCKS IN THIS ARTICLE

Comments