Amazon Earnings Are Tonight, Along With Apple and Facebook
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It’s a huge day for the Nasdaq-100, with some of the biggest and most important stocks issuing results.
Amazon.com (AMZN), Apple (AAPL) and Alphabet (GOOGL), three of the market’s four companies worth at least $1 trillion, report earnings this afternoon. Facebook (FB), the fifth-biggest, is also on deck, along with Starbucks (SBUX), Twitter (TWTR) and Activision Blizzard (ATVI).
Fang Stocks Report Earnings
Several of the companies are grouped under the “FANG” or “FANG+” basket. (Facebook, Amazon.com, Netflix, Google + Apple.) These are broad mass-market technology companies with hundreds of millions of users. They’re flashier and more popular than other techs serving enterprise clients, like Microsoft (MSFT) or Salesforce.com (CRM).
AMZN was just taking off in late 2019. It then got a huge demand boost from coronavirus, making it one of the first major companies to break out to new highs in mid-April.
Wall Street thinks the growth continued at about 32 percent in the third quarter. However, attention will probably focus on guidance for a few reasons. First, Amazon Prime Day was delayed from July (third quarter) to October (fourth quarter). AMZN already announced Prime Day generated record demand and volume for third-party sellers.
Second, the holiday-shopping season will obviously be huge for AMZN. That’s especially true if the coronavirus pandemic continues to worsen and drives more business online. Third, CEO Jeff Bezos is in the midst of adding fulfillment centers in places like Waco, Texas, Kansas City and Papillion, Nebraska. Investors will be interested in their cost and long-term profit boost.
AMZN has drifted like the rest of the market, hitting a new high in early September and retreating since. It’s essentially unchanged since the first half of July.
Apple and the iPhone
AAPL’s report could have a lot of moving pieces. Recent quarters have focused on the growth of software and services, but now attention will likely shift back to hardware.
First, wearables like Watch could have a strong quarter after Tim Cook unveiled new products in September. This segment, while small, enjoyed record sales earlier this year. Continued growth would suggest the company is successfully evolving into yet another product category. Wearables also reinforce the big enchilada: iPhones.
Cook released the iPhone 12 earlier this month. It will be AAPL’s first smartphone with 5G networking. Even if the backward-looking numbers aren’t amazing, some recent headlines suggest momentum is returning:
On October 22, Canaccord said AAPL sold more than 800,000 iPhones in India last quarter. Android runs on more than 90 percent of the country’s phones, and AAPL is only now entering the market. It could be a huge opportunity, given India’s population of 1.3 billion people.
On October 28, Morgan Stanley said increased pollution in Zhengzhou, China, indicated more iPhone production. Given the timing, it could be tied to the latest iPhone 12 models unveiled two weeks ago.
Facebook and Advertising
Social-media giant FB also reports tonight. It’s already been moving after smaller platforms like Snap (SNAP) and Pinterest (PINS) crushed revenue estimates. Wall Street interpreted that as evidence of a big advertising rebound. Now everyone wants to know whether FB had a similar surge (especially after a high-profile boycott in the third quarter).
E-commerce is another growth area for FB. Its stock ripped to new highs in May after announcing its “Shops” initiative to support small businesses. We’ve gotten more details recently. WhatsApp launched in-app buying and cloud-based hosting. Instagram TV (IGTV) rolled out a shopping functionality.
Aside from the packed roster of earnings, today also has big economic news. The Commerce Department’s initial reading of third-quarter gross domestic product is expected to show GDP surge about 31 percent. (Following a coronavirus-induced 31.4 percent drop April-June.)
Initial jobless claims are also due. Last week they fell more than expected to the lowest level of the pandemic. Forecasters expect a another decline to 758,000. (Lower claims are “good news” because they mean fewer Americans are applying for unemployment benefits.) Both GDP and claims come out at 8:30 a.m. ET today.
In conclusion, Thursday, October 29 is a major day of news and information. Hopefully this article helps you prepare.
David Russell is VP of Market Intelligence at TradeStation Group. Drawing on two decades of experience as a financial journalist and analyst, his background includes equities, emerging markets, fixed-income and derivatives. He previously worked at Bloomberg News, CNBC and E*TRADE Financial.
Russell systematically reviews countless global financial headlines and indicators in search of broad tradable trends that present opportunities repeatedly over time. Customers can expect him to keep them apprised of sector leadership, relative strength and the big stories – especially those overlooked by other commentators. He’s also a big fan of generating leverage with options to limit capital at risk.
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