By George Prior
The Big Tech titans are reporting earnings this week and the sector remains “surprisingly robust” for three key reasons, affirms the CEO of one of the world’s largest independent financial advisory, asset management and fintech organizations.
The analysis from deVere Group’s Nigel Green comes as Microsoft and Alphabet (parent company of Google) report on Tuesday, Meta (parent company of Facebook, Instagram and Whatsapp) report Wednesday, and Amazon on Thursday.
He says: “Five tech companies have made up two-thirds of the S&P 500’s gains this year, so global investors are watching carefully the earnings reports of Big Tech this week.
“Of course, not all the titans will have performed to the same level, however, in general terms, tech remains surprisingly robust.
“Despite the sharp rise in the cost of capital over the last year, tech and other growth sectors have shared in the broader stock market gains since the start of the year.
Free Reports:
Get our Weekly Commitment of Traders Reports - See where the biggest traders (Hedge Funds and Commercial Hedgers) are positioned in the futures markets on a weekly basis.
Sign Up for Our Stock Market Newsletter – Get updated on News, Charts & Rankings of Public Companies when you join our Stocks Newsletter
“This is surprising to many market analysts.
“A rise in interest rates is often associated with weakness in growth stocks, as investors favour money market funds and other products that benefit from rate hikes.
“While some of the not-yet-profitable tech companies have been hit by this effect, in aggregate the quoted tech sector looks resilient.”
A combination of factors is probably at work, according to the deVere CEO.
“First, the largest US tech stocks sit on large cash piles, reducing their need to borrow money to fund investment and growth.
“Second, falls in bond yields over the last six weeks, triggered by the Silicon Valley Bank crisis, have helped reduce funding costs for smaller growth companies.
“Third, in an era of weaker long-term GDP growth, investors may be searching out -and willing to pay a premium for- the sectors that will show earnings growth.”
Indeed, investor confidence in the sector remains strong.
Despite last year’s share price falls, the trailing price-earnings ratio on the NASDAQ index of US tech stocks is currently 25 times. This is down from the pandemic-era peak of 29 at the end of 2021, but it is still well above the 21 times at the end of March 2020.
On Monday, Nigel Green said in a media statement that investors around the world will be looking for three main factors from the tech giants this reporting season.
“Guidance will be critical as indicators show the economy is headed for a downturn and investors will be eager to know which companies are best-positioned to manage this.”
Guidance helps evaluate a company’s past performance in light of its future prospects.
“Cost-cutting measures and their efficacy will be poured over too. Have the recent mass lay-offs, following the mass hiring spree during and post Covid had an impact on the bottom line?”
“Plus, the AI (artificial intelligence) race will be closely monitored by investors.”
He concludes: “The total market cap of the top six tech companies in the US is an estimated $7 trillion. It’s a hugely critical sector and, as such, it’s surprising robustness will cheer markets and global investors.”
About:
deVere Group is one of the world’s largest independent advisors of specialist global financial solutions to international, local mass affluent, and high-net-worth clients. It has a network of more than 70 offices across the world, over 80,000 clients and $12bn under advisement.

- COT Metals Charts: Speculator Bets led lower by Gold, Platinum & Silver Apr 13, 2025
- COT Bonds Charts: Speculator Bets led by SOFR-3M, Fed Funds & Ultra Treasury Bonds Apr 13, 2025
- COT Soft Commodities Charts: Speculator Bets led by Soybean Oil & Wheat Apr 13, 2025
- COT Stock Market Charts: Speculator Bets led higher by Nasdaq, Russell & DowJones Apr 13, 2025
- The US stocks are back to selling off. The US raised tariffs on China to 145% Apr 11, 2025
- EUR/USD Hits Three-Year High as the US Dollar Suffers Heavy Losses Apr 11, 2025
- Markets rallied sharply on the back of a 90-day tariff postponement. China became an exception with tariffs of 125% Apr 10, 2025
- Pound Rallies Sharply Weak Dollar Boosts GBP, but BoE Rate Outlook May Complicate Future Gains Apr 10, 2025
- Tariffs on US imports come into effect today. The RBNZ expectedly lowered the rate by 0.25% Apr 9, 2025
- Volatility in financial markets is insane. Oil fell to $60.7 per barrel Apr 8, 2025