Market Update: 27th January 2026 – Big Tech Earnings: Time to Show the Workings

As earnings season hits full stride, the market finds itself asking a familiar but uncomfortable question: are Big Tech’s valuations still running on fundamentals, or just fumes and faith? This week, Apple, Meta, and Microsoft step into the confessional and investors won’t be listening politely.

After months of sideways trading and selective optimism, the bar has moved. Beating estimates is no longer impressive. You have to explain why the next twelve months won’t disappoint.

Apple: Perfection Is No Longer Enough

Apple will, almost certainly, report another impeccably engineered quarter. The machine rarely misfires. Revenues should rise, margins will behave, and the balance sheet will remain a work of art.
And yet the stock doesn’t move on competence alone anymore.

The real question is whether Apple can convince the market it has something new to say. Services growth remains solid, but hardly thrilling. iPhone demand is steady, not explosive. And on AI the defining theme of this market cycle, Apple has so far preferred elegant silence over bold declaration.

That strategy may be intentional. It may even be smart. But investors are growing restless. Apple doesn’t need to shout about AI but it does need to show how it monetises it without denting margins. Until then, expect admiration rather than excitement.

Meta: The Numbers Look Fine – The Spending Doesn’t

Meta’s earnings will look good on paper. Advertising demand has stabilised, engagement remains strong, and the core platforms are doing exactly what cash-generating platforms should do.
The issue, as ever, is what happens after the ad dollars roll in.

Capital expenditure remains eye-watering, and the market is far less patient than it was two years ago. Investors want to know whether Meta’s AI ambitions are a disciplined investment or simply another exercise in “trust us, it’ll matter later.”

If Meta can pair solid ad growth with credible restraint or at least a clearer return profile, the stock has room to breathe. If not, the earnings call risks becoming an expensive reminder that profitability is not a personality trait.

Microsoft: The Market’s Favourite – But Not Unconditionally

Microsoft enters earnings season in the strongest position of the three, but also with the least room for error. Expectations are high, confidence is widespread, and the AI narrative is largely priced in.

Azure growth will be the headline act, but investors are watching the margins just as closely. AI infrastructure isn’t cheap, and the market wants reassurance that Microsoft isn’t buying growth today at the expense of returns tomorrow.

Deliver accelerating cloud growth and capex discipline, and Microsoft reinforces its position as the market’s grown-up. Miss on either, and even this stock will feel gravity.

Bottom Line

This isn’t an earnings season about surprises, it’s about credibility.

The market knows these companies can make money. What it wants now is proof that AI spending, cloud expansion, and platform dominance can coexist with discipline and shareholder returns.
In short: less theatre, more execution.

Big Tech has been given the benefit of the doubt for long enough. This week, investors will be checking the receipts.

Anyway, till next time, all of you trade safe!

By James Trescothick
Head of Market Research and Market Analysis

Risk Disclaimer: This information is for educational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice. Financial markets involve risks, and past performance is not indicative of future results. Always conduct your own research and seek professional advice before making investment decisions.