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Posted August 4, 2025 at 10:30 am
Another week of stellar earnings led to the S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite hitting record levels by Thursday, but what a difference a day makes. By Friday, disappointing Nonfarm payrolls for July (73,000), as well as downward revisions to May and June figures1, sent markets in a tailspin and prompted President Trump to fire the commissioner of labor statistics.2 Add to that strained US-Russia relations3 and a tariff deadline4, and both the S&P 500 and Nasdaq ended the week down 2.5%.
The earnings party started after-the-bell on Wednesday when both Meta and Microsoft blew expectations out of the water for the second quarter, and provided better-than-expected guidance.
Once again, heavy investments in AI were rewarded by investors, both companies have focused on increasing capex to build out AI infrastructure and capabilities and said they will continue to do so. Meta expects 2025 capex in a range of $66-72B, increasing the lower end of the company’s previous estimate of $64 – $72B.5 Microsoft said they expect over $30B of capex in the first fiscal quarter, higher than the roughly $25B FactSet analysts were anticipating.6 Those results helped both stocks rocket higher, with Meta shares up 12% by the close on Thursday, and Microsoft up 5%.
Next up were results from Apple and Amazon. Of these two, Amazon was expected to be the standout due to strength from AWS, but when revenue figures from the company’s cloud service underwhelmed investors, especially in comparison to the growth rivals such as Alphabet and Microsoft have seen, the stock fell 7% the next trading day.7 Apple on the other hand, long criticized for its lack of AI investment, beat their FQ3 earnings expectations with strong iPhone sales.8 That was enough to send the stock up 2% in pre-market trading Friday, but that eventually fell apart along with other stocks that day.
With the results from those names as well as the 160 other S&P 500 constituents that reported last week, Q2 growth propelled to 10.3% from 6.4% the prior week. Revenues fell slightly to 4.9% from 5.1% the week prior. Beat rates remain impressive with 82% of S&P 500 companies surpassing expectations on the bottom-line and 79% on the top-line, better than the 1, 5, and 10-year beat rate averages according to FactSet.9
This week threads of the AI trade will continue to appear in reports from Palantir and Advanced Micro Devices, both of which saw their stocks move higher after reports from Meta and Microsoft. We’ll also begin to hear from consumer driven names such as Lyft, Uber, McDonald’s, Airbnb, Disney and Yum! Brands.
Source: Wall Street Horizon
Academic research shows that, when a company confirms a quarterly earnings date that is later than when they have historically reported, it’s typically a sign that the company will share negative news on their upcoming call, while moving a release date earlier suggests the opposite.10
This week we get results from a number of large companies on major indexes that have pushed their Q2 2025 earnings dates outside of their historical norms. Ten companies within the S&P 500 confirmed outlier earnings dates for this week, all of which are later than usual and therefore have negative DateBreaks Factors*. Those names are Aflac (AFL), Eaton Corporation (ETN), DuPont de Nemours (DD), Public Service Enterprise Group (PEG), Pfizer (PFE), APA Corporation (APA), McDonald’s (MCD), GoDaddy Inc. (GDDY) and ConocoPhillips (COP).
* Wall Street Horizon DateBreaks Factor: statistical measurement of how an earnings date (confirmed or revised) compares to the reporting company’s 5-year trend for the same quarter. Negative means the earnings date is confirmed to be later than historical average while Positive is earlier.
The peak weeks of the Q2 earnings season are expected to fall between July 28 – August 15, with each week expected to see over 2,000 reports. Currently, August 7 is predicted to be the most active day with 1,283 companies anticipated to report. Thus far, 79% of companies have confirmed their earnings date, and 34% have reported (out of our universe of 11,000+ global names), so this is subject to change. The remaining dates are estimated based on historical reporting data.

Source: Wall Street Horizon
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Originally Posted on August 4, 2025 – The Earnings Party Hits a Wall: Strong Q2 Profits Can’t Overcome Macro Fears
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