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Finance

Trump has flipped the script on Big Tech earnings

Last updated: April 28, 2025 8:00 pm
Oliver James
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6 Min Read
Trump has flipped the script on Big Tech earnings
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  • Big Tech companies report earnings this week in a very different climate from last quarter.

  • Tariffs and uncertainty are setting the mood for Meta, Microsoft, Apple, and Amazon.

  • Tech CEOs, many of whom supported Trump, must convince investors they can sustain their growth.

Big Tech CEOs had seemed ready for good vibes with President Donald Trump. Instead, they’re heading into their latest earnings season with a difficult task: addressing a Trump-led vibe shift that’s been anything but kind to them.

This week, several tech firms, including Amazon, Apple, Meta, and Microsoft, report their latest earnings against a backdrop of uncertainty that sent their stocks plummeting and added pressure on them to deliver results on big bets like AI.

Investors and CEOs started the year with very different expectations. They had hoped for a Trump bump from deregulation, the return of dealmaking, and an overall pro-growth agenda.

“We now have a US administration that is proud of our leading companies, prioritizes American technology winning, and that will defend our values and interests abroad,” Mark Zuckerberg, the CEO of Meta, said in an earnings call in January.

Despite a market sell-off in January stemming from the release of a new AI model from China’s DeepSeek, there appeared to be optimism among the Big Tech CEOs who had donated to Trump’s presidential campaign, lined up behind him at his inauguration, and shared investment commitments collectively worth over $1 trillion to the US.

Instead, they got tariffs and uncertainty.

Tech company CEOs at Trump's inauguration day.
Tech company CEOs at Trump’s inauguration.SHAWN THEW/via REUTERS

Big Tech stocks have taken a beating

The pain for Big Tech has been most evident in the aftermath of Trump’s “Liberation Day” tariff proposals in April, which raised fears about the long-term value of tech firms with supply chains and large customer bases in regions heavily targeted by tariffs, such as China.

Apple’s share price, for instance, has fallen by almost 14% this year as its reliance on a supply chain empire in China has been called into question. Amazon is down by nearly 15%, Microsoft by more than 6%, and Meta by more than 8%.

The S&P 500 — the four Big Tech companies reporting earnings this week constitute roughly one-fifth of the benchmark index — is down by over 6% since Trump’s inauguration. Trillions of dollars have gone up in smoke.

Hamish Low, an analyst at the research firm Enders Analysis, told Business Insider that the “macro uncertainty” triggered by Trump’s administration would weigh on tech companies.

He said it would make investors more serious about the “questions that were already growing” about Big Tech’s major bets and their potential for returns.

Artificial intelligence has been a huge talking point for tech CEOs, but none have yet been able to clearly indicate when returns might come on their massive capital expenditures.

“Impressive capabilities at the frontier of research aren’t translating into either people’s experiences of AI products or the kinds of returns that match the investments going in,” Low told BI.

What may help offset some of the pain for these companies is that analysts have been lowering their expectations.

In a poll of analysts, the research firm FactSet found that the profits of the so-called Magnificent Seven tech firms were expected to rise 16% this year, down from about a 37% increase in 2024, according to figures first reported by The Wall Street Journal.

In that case, CEOs might be able to breathe a sigh of relief as reality readjusts around them. But if the fallout from tech earnings already shared this season is any indication, they may want to think twice about getting too relaxed.

Speaking as Tesla reported disappointing earnings last week, Elon Musk, who emerged as a key figure in the early days of Trump’s administration as the face of the White House DOGE office, said he would, starting next month, be “allocating far more of my time to Tesla.”

He added that the “tariff decision is entirely up to the president of the United States.”

Elon Musk.
Elon Musk said he’d focus more time on Tesla as the company battled a sell-off.LEON NEAL/POOL/AFP via Getty Images

Tesla, which has a significant manufacturing presence in China, has seen its share price drop by almost 25% since the start of the year, even with a bounce after Musk said he’d step back from DOGE.

Google, which reported earnings last week, also showed signs that Trump’s policies had given it a headache. Addressing an investor question on tariffs, Google’s chief business officer, Philipp Schindler, said: “We’re obviously not immune to the macro environment.” Google’s share price is down nearly 15% since the start of the year.

Clearly, tech CEOs are far from the position they thought they’d be in when they lined up behind Trump in January. Investors will want to know how they plan to navigate the uncertainty — and any future Trump vibe shift.

Read the original article on Business Insider

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