U.S. markets digested a one-two punch of macro + mega-cap earnings: the Fed held rates steady and signaled patience, while “Mag 7”-style AI spending and guidance once again became the driver of after-hours reactions. Tech led the attention (MSFT, META, TSLA), while several notable industrial/defense/consumer names (CAT, LHX, LEVI, RCL, IBM, NOW) added plenty of cross-currents.


🏛️ Macro: Yesterday’s FOMC Decision + Powell Presser Still Driving the Tape

The Decision

The Federal Reserve left the policy rate unchanged (target range 3.50%–3.75%), emphasizing the economy is still expanding at a “solid pace,” job gains have been “low,” and inflation remains “somewhat elevated.”

Powell’s Tone (Key Takeaways)

From Chair Powell’s opening statement, the Fed’s posture was basically:

  • No rush to cut: policy is “appropriate” after 75 bps of cuts over the prior three meetings
  • Labor market: unemployment around 4.4%, with job gains low and “stabilizing” signs
  • Inflation: easing vs. 2022 highs but still above target; Powell flagged tariffs as a factor keeping some goods inflation elevated
  • Data-dependent: “meeting-by-meeting,” not preset

Also worth noting: the Fed acknowledged the temporary federal government shutdown likely weighed on activity last quarter, with reversal effects expected as reopening boosts growth.


⚡ Mega-Cap Earnings Spotlight: $TSLA (Tesla)

Tesla’s report and call were packed with headline-grabbing strategic shifts — not just “cars,” but AI, robotics, and autonomy.

TSLA: Revenue + EPS (And first annual revenue decline)

  • Tesla reported Q4 revenue of ~$24.9B and adjusted EPS around $0.50 (with reporting that GAAP EPS was lower).
  • Tesla’s full-year 2025 revenue fell ~3% to about $94.8B–$94.83B, described widely as the company’s first annual revenue decline.

“AI company in an auto wrapper”: the big strategic pivots

1) $2B investment into xAI
Tesla disclosed plans to invest $2 billion in Elon Musk’s xAI, framing it as complementary to FSD and Optimus ambitions.

2) Capex surge: the spending spree
Multiple reports emphasized a sharp ramp in investment, with Tesla indicating capex could exceed $20B as it leans into next-gen platforms, autonomy, and robotics.

Fremont / Model S & X / Optimus: what’s confirmed vs what’s being reported

  • Several outlets report Musk discussing winding down/ending Model S and X as Tesla reallocates focus toward future autonomy/robotics priorities.
  • Regional reporting also describes plans tied to the Fremont site and shifting production emphasis toward robotics (Optimus) initiatives.

Tesla/Musk signaled a strategic deprioritization of S/X and a manufacturing reallocation toward robotics/AI, with Fremont frequently mentioned in that context.

TSLA “what the market cared about”

  • Autos are no longer the only narrative. The stock’s valuation sensitivity is increasingly tied to: autonomy rollout timelines, robotaxi progress, Optimus production scale, and AI infrastructure.
  • The “risk” side of the tape: EV demand softness + big spending + execution risk (robotaxi/robot timelines, regulatory and technical hurdles).

🧠 AI Spend Is Back in the Crosshairs: META + MSFT

$META (Meta Platforms): strong ads funding an AI arms race

Meta’s quarter leaned heavily on a strong ad engine and an aggressive AI buildout:

  • Q4 revenue rose ~24% to $58.14B (per Reuters), with upbeat Q1 revenue guidance.
  • The headline shocker: Meta guided 2026 capex to $115B–$135B as it pushes toward “superintelligence” infrastructure.

Market read-through: Meta is being rewarded (at least initially) because the core business is throwing off enough cash to justify the AI spend — “AI is paying for AI.”

$MSFT (Microsoft): big beat… but investors flinched at spend + cloud nuance

Microsoft put up large numbers, but the stock reaction was more about capex + Azure trajectory than the headline beat:

  • Revenue: $81.3B (+17% YoY) and profit/EPS above expectations.
  • Cloud: Microsoft’s cloud segment was $32.9B (+29% YoY), and coverage emphasized Azure growth cooling slightly vs recent quarters.
  • Capex: FT noted a major capex ramp to support AI infrastructure (investors are watching “how expensive is this AI ramp?”).

Theme: the market is starting to price earnings reports as “prove the AI spend is translating into durable growth” — not just spend for spend’s sake.


🧾 Other Notable Earnings: IBM, NOW, LEVI, LHX, RCL, CAT (and more)

$IBM

IBM reported:

  • Q4 revenue of $19.7B (up 12% as reported), with notable strength across software.
    Investors focused on software momentum and the durability of enterprise spend.

$NOW (ServiceNow)

ServiceNow beat and talked up AI products, but the tape was sensitive to growth expectations:

  • Fortune reported NOW raised 2026 subscription revenue guidance and highlighted momentum in its AI suite (Now Assist), yet shares were still volatile after-hours.

$LEVI (Levi Strauss)

Levi’s release emphasized forward guidance:

  • FY2026 guidance includes reported net revenue growth ~5%–6% and adjusted diluted EPS $1.40–$1.46.

$LHX (L3Harris)

L3Harris was a classic “beat EPS, worry about outlook/revenue” setup:

  • Reuters: Q4 revenue $5.65B, below expectations, with commentary tied to disruptions like the government shutdown.
  • Barron’s highlighted guidance that landed under some expectations and drove a negative reaction.

$RCL (Royal Caribbean)

Cruise demand remains sturdy:

  • Q4 adjusted EPS $2.80 on revenue around $4.26B, and 2026 adjusted EPS guidance $17.70–$18.10 (above consensus).

$CAT (Caterpillar)

Caterpillar’s own investor materials show:

  • Q4 sales/revenue $19.1B and profit per share ~$5.12.
    Macro-wise, investors read CAT as a window into industrial demand, pricing power, and cost/tariff pressures.

🎯 Market Themes Traders Are Watching

1) “Earnings ≠ stock reaction”

This week is reinforcing the idea that:

  • A beat can still sell off if guidance, margins, or capex spook investors (MSFT/NOW-style reactions).

2) AI capex is the new “rates”

Markets are increasingly treating AI spend as a macro factor:

  • Rewarding the companies whose cash engines can finance it (META)
  • Punishing where spend rises faster than visible near-term payoff (MSFT-style concerns)

3) Fed = steady, but data rules everything

Powell’s message keeps traders anchored to:

  • inflation progress,
  • labor market cooling/stabilization,
  • and the Fed’s willingness to wait.

👀 What to Watch Next (Trade-Planning Checklist)

  • TSLA follow-through: does the tape reward the AI/robotics pivot again, or does it fade on execution risk?
  • AI capex “tolerance”: will the market keep rewarding META’s spend while questioning MSFT’s pace?
  • Macro data vs Fed narrative: any inflation surprises could quickly reprice the “patient Fed” story.
  • Industrials/consumers: CAT/RCL/LEVI offer a read on demand strength vs cost pressures.

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