The Jerusalem Post

Antitrust cloud could mar Big Tech earnings reports today

- • By NOEL RANDEWICH

Apple AAPL. O, Alphabet GOOGL. O, Amazon AMZN. O and Facebook FB. O, together accounting for about a fifth of the S& P 500’ s total value, report their quarterly results on Thursday, with their stocks trading near record highs, even as they face increasing antitrust scrutiny.

Big Tech for years has been criticized for choking competitio­n and stifling smaller competitor­s, and investors are looking for signs that they are extending their lead during the pandemic. However, antitrust storm clouds in recent months have increased.

A scathing report by a House of Representa­tives panel this month detailing abuses of market power by large tech companies suggests a tough road ahead should Democratic presidenti­al candidate Joe Biden, who is leading in polls, win the November 3 election.

“There seems to be a lot of angst and desire to not only fine these companies, but potentiall­y change the way they do their business. In the past, there was a lot of lip service, but now you are starting to see some pretty active postures,” said Dan Morgan, a portfolio manager at Synovus Trust.

Morgan said he expects to see companies set money aside to pay for potential future fines.

Apple, Google- parent Alphabet, Amazon and Facebook have a combined stock market value of $ 5.5 trillion, compared to the S& P 500’ s $ 29 trillion market capitaliza­tion.

Their reports come amid turbulence on Wall Street, with the S& P 500 SPX on Monday posting its biggest daily decline in four weeks, as soaring coronaviru­s cases and uncertaint­y about a fiscal relief bill in Washington dim the outlook for an economic recovery.

Microsoft MSFT. O, which posts its results late on Tuesday, has elevated its stock market value by a third in 2020 to $ 1.6 trillion. Investors expect the software maker to report an 8% rise in quarterly revenue and a 10% jump in net income, with Cowen analyst Derrick Wood saying in a recent client note that Windows sales could get a lift from additional laptop demand as people keep working from home.

S& P 500 technology sector earnings per share are seen rising 0.3% in the third quarter, according to I/ B/ E/ S data from Refinitiv.

By comparison, analysts expect S& P 500 companies to see an aggregate decline of 16.7% in their third- quarter earnings as the US economy remains crippled by the pandemic.

Amazon’s September- quarter report will likely be a “calm before the storm” as the online retailer builds more fulfillmen­t centers in anticipati­on of a busy holiday shopping season, Bernstein analyst Mark Shmulik wrote in a client note on Monday.

“With a holiday crunch expected, the scale and pace at which ( Amazon) is bringing incrementa­l capacity online is encouragin­g,” Shmulik wrote.

Twitter also reports its results on Thursday, with analysts on average expecting a 9% revenue decline as advertiser­s hurt by the pandemic spend less.

Analysts on average expect Apple’s report after the bell on Thursday to reflect a 0.5% drop in revenue to $ 63.7 billion and net income down 11.2% to $ 12.1b. However, Apple investors are mostly focused on the outlook for sales of the newest iPhone and growth in recurring revenue from apps, games and video and music streaming. ( Reuters)

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