美科技股Q4喜忧参半
Guo Ji Jin Rong Bao·2026-01-29 13:25

Core Insights - The technology sector remains a key growth driver for the U.S. market, with expectations that it will account for nearly half of the S&P 500's earnings growth by 2026, despite a projected decline in overall earnings growth from 9.2% to 5.5% when excluding tech [1] Group 1: Tesla's Financial Performance - Tesla reported Q4 2025 earnings and revenue that exceeded market expectations, but its annual revenue saw a decline for the first time, highlighting challenges in its core automotive business [3] - Q4 2025 total revenue was approximately $25.7 billion, down about 3% year-over-year, with automotive revenue declining 11% to $17.7 billion [3] - For the full year 2025, Tesla's total revenue decreased from $97.7 billion in 2024 to $94.8 billion, a drop of 3%, attributed to reduced vehicle deliveries and declining regulatory credit income [3] Group 2: Meta and Microsoft's Earnings - Meta and Microsoft both reported revenues that exceeded expectations, but their stock market reactions were markedly different, with Microsoft shares dropping over 6% while Meta shares rose nearly 9% [5] - Meta's capital expenditures reached $22.1 billion in Q4 2025, totaling $72.2 billion for the year, a significant increase from $39.2 billion in 2024, with revenues of $59.89 billion for the quarter and $200.1 billion for the year [11] - Microsoft reported a record high capital expenditure of $37.5 billion in Q2 2026, a 66% year-over-year increase, with revenues of $81.3 billion, a 17% increase, but concerns arose regarding the sustainability of growth relative to its high spending [11][12] Group 3: Apple's Upcoming Earnings - Apple is set to release its earnings report, with analysts expecting a revenue increase of approximately 11.1% to between $138.1 billion and $138.4 billion for the upcoming quarter [14] - The previous quarter saw Apple generate $102.5 billion in revenue, a 7.9% year-over-year increase, slightly above Wall Street expectations [14] - Despite positive earnings expectations, Apple's stock has only risen 7.8% over the past 52 weeks, underperforming the S&P 500 and tech sector ETFs [15]