Big Tech's "Magnificent Seven" heads into earnings season reeling from
Trump turbulence
[April 21, 2025] By
MICHAEL LIEDTKE
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — As Big Tech kicks off its quarterly earnings season
this week, the industry's bellwether companies have been thrust into a
cauldron of uncertainty and turmoil that they didn't anticipate when
Donald Trump re-entered the White House nearly 100 days ago.
Since President Trump's Jan. 20 inauguration, Big Tech stocks have been
on a see-sawing ride that has eviscerated trillions of dollars in
shareholder wealth amid an onslaught of tariffs and other potentially
detrimental actions.
It's the polar opposite of what Apple CEO Tim Cook, Tesla CEO Elon Musk,
Google CEO Sundar Pichai, Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg and Amazon
founder Jeff Bezos hoped for when they assembled behind Trump as he was
sworn in.
That display of unity reflected a belief that Trump's second stint in
the White House would be a refreshing change from the heavy-handed
regulation of President Joe Biden’s administration while unleashing even
more lucrative opportunities in artificial intelligence and deal-making.
But the Trump administration’s policies so far have vexed Big Tech’s
“Magnificent Seven” companies — a group consisting of Apple, Microsoft,
Nvidia, Amazon, Tesla, Google parent Alphabet and Facebook parent Meta
Platforms. Since Trump’s inauguration, the Magnificent Seven’s combined
market value has plunged by $3.8 trillion, or 22%, as of April 20.

The financial damage was even more severe a few days after Trump’s April
2 unveiling of sweeping reciprocal tariffs that would have exacted a
heavy toll on Big Tech's supply chains in China and other key markets
around the globe. A temporary freeze on the majority of the most
punitive tariffs and an exemption from most of the fees on electronics
coming in from China has provided some relief, but Trump has made it
clear the reprieve may be short-lived.
That has left the specter of Trump's ongoing trade war hanging over Big
Tech, whose influence extends around the world.
“The mass confusion created by this constant news flow out of the White
House is dizzying for the industry and investors and creating massive
uncertainty and chaos for companies trying to plan their supply chain,
inventory, and demand,” Wedbush Securities analyst Dan Ives said.
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Trader Vincent Napolitano works on the floor of the New York Stock
Exchange, Thursday, April 17, 2025. (AP Photo/Richard Drew)
 Besides the upheaval triggered by
Trump's tariffs, his administration is also in the midst of trying
to prove regulators' allegations that Meta has been running an
illegal monopoly in social networking, and working to persuade a
federal judge to break up Google after its search engine last year
was found to be illegally abusing its power. Trump also has given no
indication of abandoning antitrust lawsuits filed by the Biden
administration that aim to hobble Apple and Amazon.
And Nvidia absorbed a significant setback last week when the Trump
administration banned it from selling one of its popular AI chips to
China, prompting the company to record a $5.5 billion charge to
account for the stockpile of processors that it intended to export
to that country.
Tech CEOs will get a chance to discuss the fallout from the trade
war and other challenges still ahead during analyst conference calls
that will be held as part of their companies’ financial reports for
the January-March quarter.
The ritual will kick off Tuesday when Tesla is scheduled to release
its full financial report after already revealing that its
first-quarter car sales dropped by 13% from the same time last year.
The decline occurred against a backdrop of vandalism, widespread
protests and calls for a consumer boycott amid a backlash to Musk’s
high-profile role in the White House overseeing a cost-cutting purge
of U.S. government agencies.
After Musk discusses his strategy for reversing a decrease in
Tesla's market value since he joined Trump in the White House,
Google parent Alphabet Inc. is scheduled to announce its results on
Thursday. Then four of the Magnificent Seven will get their turn
next week: Amazon on April 29; Meta and Microsoft on April 30; and
Apple on May 1.
Nvidia, which operates on a fiscal year ending in January, is
scheduled to wrap things up on May 28 with the release of its
quarterly results.
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