The latest earnings reports from major US tech firms presented a mixed picture, as Tesla and Microsoft fell short of market expectations, while Meta Platforms exceeded forecasts across all key metrics.
Despite weaker-than-expected results, Tesla’s stock rebounded on future growth prospects, while Microsoft’s shares fell on concerns over slowing cloud growth. Meanwhile, Meta’s strong earnings propelled its stock higher, despite ongoing legal challenges.
Tesla: Focus Shifts to Future Growth
Tesla reported a 2% year-on-year revenue increase in Q4 2024, a significant slowdown from 8% growth in the previous quarter. The company’s core automotive sales fell by 8%, and gross margins declined to 16.3%, marking a four-quarter low.
Despite these setbacks, investors reacted positively to Tesla’s future plans. The company reaffirmed that its next-generation affordable vehicles remain on track for 2025 production, with autonomous vehicle Cybercab set for mass production in 2026.
“We expect the vehicle business to return to growth in 2025,” Tesla stated. Additionally, Tesla’s energy storage business remained a bright spot, with revenue surging 113%, and the company expects at least 50% growth in that segment this year.
Tesla’s stock initially fell after the earnings release but later rebounded, closing up 4% in after-hours trading.
Microsoft: Cloud Growth Slows Amid Capacity Constraints
Microsoft reported 12.3% revenue growth year-on-year, marking its slowest pace since mid-2023. While earnings per share ($3.23) beat estimates ($3.12), concerns over slower growth in Azure Cloud weighed on investor sentiment.
Azure’s 31% revenue growth fell short of the previous quarter’s 33%, as Microsoft struggled with data center capacity constraints. CFO Amy Hood warned that growth will remain flat in the near term, estimating a 31%-32% increase in the current quarter.
Despite these concerns, CEO Satya Nadella highlighted the company’s AI success, noting that Microsoft’s AI-driven business reached an annual revenue run rate of $13 billion—up 175% year-on-year.
The stock, however, fell 4.6% after the earnings release, as investors reacted to the higher-than-expected AI infrastructure spending and slowing cloud growth.
Meta Platforms: Strong Performance Despite Legal Challenges
Meta exceeded expectations across all key financial metrics, reporting:
- $48.39 billion in Q4 revenue, up 21% year-on-year.
- $8.02 per share in profit, significantly above analysts’ forecast of $6.77.
The company credited its strong results to growth in advertising revenue and the success of its Meta AI chatbot, which reached 600 million users in December. CEO Mark Zuckerberg expects AI user numbers to hit 1 billion in 2025.
However, Meta issued a cautious revenue outlook for the current quarter, and did not provide full-year guidance for 2025. It also warned that regulatory challenges in the EU and US could impact its business.
Meta’s stock rose 2.3% in after-hours trading and is up 14.71% year-to-date, making it the best-performing stock among the Magnificent Seven so far this year.
Market Reactions: Tech Stocks Diverge
- Tesla (+4% after-hours): Investors focused on long-term growth, despite weak earnings.
- Microsoft (-4.6%): Concerns over slowing cloud growth and AI spending weighed on shares.
- Meta (+2.3%): Strong results overshadowed regulatory risks.
With earnings season in full swing, investors will closely watch Apple, Alphabet, and Amazon, as the rest of the Magnificent Seven report their results in the coming days.