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IPOs and what you need to know

This is the point where 'private' becomes 'public'. It gives the market its first real look under the hood of companies like OpenAI, SpaceX and a new wave of ASX hopefuls.

What is an IPO?

An initial public offering (IPO) is when a private company offers its shares to the public for the first time. Before an IPO, shares are usually held only by founders, early employees and private investors but going public opens those shares to a broader market.

For traders, IPOs may be the first opportunity to gain direct exposure to a company's stock. They can create a unique environment of elevated volatility and heightened interest, but they also carry higher risk because price history is limited and sentiment can shift quickly.

US$171.8 billion

Global IPO proceeds in 2025, up 39% year on year

US$3 trillion plus

Combined estimated valuation of top 2026 IPO candidates

1,293

Global listings in 2025, the sharpest rebound since the post-pandemic boom

Upcoming IPOs across global exchanges

CompanyEstimated valuationExchangeStatus
Anthropic
Artificial intelligence
~US$350 billionNasdaqRumoured
Databricks
AI and data
~US$134 billionNasdaqExpected
Firmus Technologies
AI infrastructure
~A$6 billionASXExpected
Greencross
Pet care & veterinary
~A$4 billion plusASXRumoured
OpenAI
Artificial intelligence
~US$850 billionNasdaqExpected
Rokt
E-commerce adtech
~US$7.9 billionNasdaq and ASX CDIExpected
SpaceX
Aerospace and AI
~US$1.5 trillionNasdaqExpected
Stripe
Fintech
~US$140 billionNYSE/NasdaqRumoured
Source: Publicly available company announcements, exchange materials, reputable media reporting and market commentary, as at 21 April 2026. Estimated valuations, exchanges and listing status are indicative only and may change without notice.

US IPO candidates

SpaceX, OpenAI, Anthropic and more

Read more

ASX IPO candidates

Firmus Technologies, Greencross and more

Read more

How a listing works

From boardroom to exchange floor

By listing day, institutional investors have usually already assessed the company. Understanding the six-stage process helps traders see what may already be reflected in the price before the stock opens to the broader market.

Preparation

The company selects an underwriter to assess its finances, corporate structure and market positioning.

Registration

Underwriters conduct due diligence and lodge disclosure documents with the relevant regulator.

Roadshow

Executives pitch to institutional investors and analysts. This is where demand is built and price expectations are set, before retail traders ever see the stock.

Pricing

Based on roadshow feedback, underwriters set the final share price and decide how many shares will be issued.

Listing day

Shares begin trading on the chosen exchange. For most traders, this is the first chance to trade the stock.

Post-IPO

Now public, the company must publish financial results regularly and meet the governance standards of its exchange.

Trading IPOs with CFDs

Why CFDs suit IPO volatility

IPO listing day is often defined by large sentiment swings and thin price history. That combination can make traditional buy-and-hold exposure harder to manage. CFDs let traders take a view on either side of the move, size positions precisely and act quickly as the story develops.

Go long or short

Trade the initial surge or the post-hype correction. CFDs let you take a position in either direction from listing day onward.

Shorter time horizons

IPO volatility tends to compress into the first days and weeks. CFDs are well suited to these shorter, event-driven windows

Built-in risk tools

Stop loss and limit orders can help define your risk beforeentry, which matters when price discovery is still unfolding.

US and Australian market coverage

Access share CFDs across US and Australian markets, including names like Rokt and Firmus Technologies, from one account.

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News & analysis

AI
Shares
Google TPU chips and NVIDIA: What the AI chip war means for markets

For the past three years, investing in artificial intelligence (AI) infrastructure has followed a relatively simple logic: find the companies building the picks and shovels for the gold rush. At the top of that list sat one name: NVIDIA.

Its chips power many of the world’s AI models. Its software ecosystem keeps developers loyal. Its stock has been one of the most dramatic wealth-creation stories in a generation.

Then Google walked into a conference room in Las Vegas and signalled it was getting serious about making its own silicon available to the world.

Here is what happened, and why it matters for investors.

When Google Draws Its Sword — AI Chip War Analysis | GO Markets
The TPU glossary, key terms
TPU
Tensor Processing Unit. Google’s custom chip built specifically for AI mathematics, not general graphics.
GPU
Graphics Processing Unit. NVIDIA’s chip, originally built for gaming, now the dominant AI training hardware.
Inference
Running a model in the real world. Different, cheaper and increasingly important compared with training.
CUDA
NVIDIA’s software layer. The real competitive moat. Millions of developers are locked in by code, not chips.

What Google announced

At Google Cloud Next 2026 in Las Vegas, Google made two distinct announcements. It confirmed general availability of Ironwood, its seventh-generation TPU, the first purpose-built for what Google calls the “agentic era” of inference at scale. It also previewed its eighth-generation architecture: two purpose-built chips, TPU 8t for large-scale training and TPU 8i for high-speed inference, both targeting TSMC 2nm manufacturing and expected to reach general availability later in 2026.

A TPU is Google’s custom alternative to NVIDIA’s graphics processing unit (GPU). Where a GPU is a general-purpose workhorse, a TPU is a specialist chip built from the ground up for AI calculations. Google has been building them since 2016. The eighth generation is its most ambitious split yet, and the first time the company has designed separate chips for each half of the AI lifecycle.

The TPU 8t training pod reportedly delivers nearly three times the compute of an equivalent Ironwood pod, with double the performance per watt. The TPU 8i inference chip is designed to serve millions of AI agents simultaneously for enterprise customers.

That last part carries a structural implication. On a recent earnings call, CEO Sundar Pichai indicated that as TPU demand grows from AI labs, capital markets firms and high-performance computing applications, Google would begin delivering TPUs to select customers in their own data centres. Google is no longer content to keep its silicon advantage internal.

Google is no longer just a TPU user. It is becoming a TPU vendor, and its biggest customers are already signed up.

Anthropic’s compute strategy

Anthropic, the AI company behind Claude, has confirmed a major infrastructure deal with Google covering access to up to one million Ironwood TPU chips. The commitment is worth tens of billions of dollars and was formally announced by both companies.

Understanding that deal requires understanding Anthropic’s compute strategy in full.

Compute Infrastructure Strategy
Amazon Trainium
Anthropic’s primary cloud and training partner is Amazon. Project Rainier, Anthropic’s frontier model supercluster, runs on Trainium 2 chips across multiple US data centres. Anthropic has committed to up to 5 gigawatts of current and future Trainium capacity.
Google TPU
Confirmed deal for up to one million Ironwood chips, plus 3.5 gigawatts of further TPU capacity from 2027. Anthropic has used Google TPUs since 2023 and described strong price-performance efficiency as the driver for the expansion.
NVIDIA GPU
Third pillar of Anthropic’s diversified infrastructure. NVIDIA GPUs support research, specialist workloads and certain training runs. The multi-platform strategy is deliberate, with no single-vendor lock-in, optimising each dollar of compute.

The multi-platform picture matters because coverage elsewhere has occasionally characterised this Google deal as Anthropic “switching” from NVIDIA. That framing understates the deliberate architecture of Anthropic’s compute strategy. The Google deal is an expansion, not a departure from either AWS or NVIDIA.

Why this matters beyond the benchmark

On a per-chip basis, the current generation comparison is closer than the headlines suggest. Ironwood, now in general availability, delivers approximately 4.6 petaflops of FP8 computing power. NVIDIA’s Blackwell B200 delivers roughly 4.5 petaflops at FP16, although cross-precision comparisons require care, as the two figures are not measured on an identical scale.

But benchmark comparisons miss the bigger story.

At pod scale, where these chips are actually deployed, the gap widens. An Ironwood superpod of 9,216 chips delivers 42.5 exaflops. The eighth-generation TPU 8t pod, at 9,600 chips, targets 121 exaflops at FP4 precision. Google also claims near-linear scaling to one million chips inside a single logical cluster. For hyperscalers running hundreds of thousands of chips simultaneously, pod-level economics matter far more than per-chip benchmarks.

Performance benchmark
Chip comparison: compute and efficiency
Precision note: direct comparison requires caution. Ironwood compute is measured at FP8, NVIDIA B200 at FP16, TPU 8t pod figures at FP4. Halving FP4 figures provides a rough FP8 equivalent. Performance per watt is indexed to NVIDIA H100 baseline 100 and reflects Google’s published claims versus Ironwood, not independent verification. Benchmark results vary by workload and conditions.

The NVIDIA position

NVIDIA currently controls an estimated 81% of the AI data centre chip market, according to IDC. That is an extraordinary concentration of market power, and the near-term demand picture has remained resilient.

Recent analyst expectations have pointed to strong NVIDIA earnings growth, supported by elevated demand for AI infrastructure and broad adoption of the Blackwell platform. NVIDIA has itself guided for a combined US$1 trillion in Blackwell and upcoming Vera Rubin orders across 2026 and 2027.

AMD is developing rack-scale server systems and has gained meaningful ground. Estimates from analysts, including IDC, suggest AMD may now hold approximately 10% of the AI accelerator market, up from low single digits two years ago. Amazon and Google continue to expand custom chip businesses. The combined chip operations at Amazon alone, covering Trainium, Graviton and Nitro, have crossed a US$20 billion annual revenue run rate, growing at triple-digit percentages year over year, with nearly 40% sequential growth in Q1 2026.

The bull case for NVIDIA remains clear: demand has stayed strong, and NVIDIA’s ecosystem remains deeply embedded across the AI compute stack.

The longer-term question is less about near-term earnings and more about pricing power in the next upgrade cycle. Every reporting period in which Google, Amazon and Microsoft gain confidence in their own silicon is another data point in that debate. The incentive structure is powerful: these companies have every reason to reduce dependency on a single supplier, and the capital to act on it.

Market structure
AI data centre chip market share, estimated 2026
Estimated share of AI accelerator revenue. Custom silicon has grown from near zero three years ago. AMD share estimates vary across methodologies. Recent analyst estimates range from 4% to 10%.
Source note: IDC estimates, Silicon Analysis, public disclosures, company filings. Figures are approximations, subject to significant revision depending on methodology and market definition.

Stocks and sectors to watch

For NVIDIA, the near-term earnings story and the longer-term competitive story are pulling in different directions. Strong results may validate the current cycle. But the structural dynamic, where major customers build their own silicon, is unlikely to reverse.

For Alphabet, the Ironwood general availability and eighth-generation preview represent a potential monetisation opportunity well beyond advertising. Google Cloud grew 63% year over year in Q1 2026, among the fastest growth rates of any major hyperscaler. TPU-as-a-service, with confirmed anchor customers including Anthropic and Meta, could extend that runway materially if enterprise inference workloads continue migrating to Google infrastructure.

The less obvious plays are in the supply chain. TPU 8t and 8i are both targeting TSMC 2nm manufacturing, with Broadcom designing the training chip and MediaTek the inference chip. TSMC may remain a critical enabler regardless of which chip architecture gains share in each cycle, as may advanced packaging suppliers, liquid cooling companies and data centre real estate investment trusts (REITs).

Power infrastructure, liquid cooling suppliers and data centre REITs may also be exposed to sustained capital expenditure growth. Combined hyperscaler capital expenditure from the four major cloud providers is tracking toward US$700 billion or more in 2026, nearly double the US$388 billion spent in 2025. That scale of investment, sustained over multiple years, represents a different kind of macro signal.

Supply chain plays: If neither NVIDIA nor Google “wins” the chip war outright, infrastructure may still benefit. TSMC already manufactures both Ironwood and the upcoming eighth-generation chips. Advanced packaging suppliers, liquid cooling companies and data centre REITs may benefit regardless of which chip architecture gains share in each cycle.

CFD trader focus
Key instruments to watch
NASDAQ 100
The primary read-across from major NVIDIA and hyperscaler results. Earnings surprises, in either direction, tend to move the index broadly.
USD/CNH
Captures tariff and trade policy sensitivity. Ongoing uncertainty has kept spreads elevated and positioning cautious.
US10Y
The 4.5% level has served as a reference point for technology valuations. A stronger-than-expected guidance print could be a catalyst worth monitoring.
General commentary only. This is not a trading signal or personal financial advice. CFD trading involves significant risk of loss. Past performance is not indicative of future results.

Where the risks sit

Higher AI infrastructure spending does not automatically translate into stock gains. Several factors complicate a straight line from “chip war” to “buy everything”.

Valuation risk
NVIDIA’s valuation has reflected high expectations for future growth. Any guidance shortfall, margin compression or sign of slower infrastructure demand could trigger a reassessment that would be felt across the sector.
The CUDA moat
NVIDIA’s deepest competitive advantage is not just hardware. It is the software ecosystem that millions of developers build on, and a decade of investment in libraries, tooling and workflows. Google’s TorchTPU initiative is a deliberate attempt to lower that switching cost, but ecosystems are slow to move. This is the risk that is easiest to underestimate.
Execution risk
Google has announced impressive chips before. Ironwood is now generally available. The eighth-generation chips are previewed. Delivering them at scale, on time, to external enterprise customers with commercial-grade service commitments is a different challenge from announcing impressive specifications.
Market share versus revenue
As AMD, Google and Amazon gain share, NVIDIA’s percentage of a rapidly growing market may fall even as its absolute revenue continues to grow. Investors evaluating the competitive thesis should distinguish between share erosion and revenue impact. They are not the same.

What investors might take away

The AI chip war is not a story of one winner and one loser. It is a story of a market that is too large and too strategically important for any single company to own indefinitely.

NVIDIA built its lead through genuine technical excellence and a decade of software investment. That lead is real, and near-term earnings are likely to continue reflecting it.

But the challengers are no longer startups with benchmark slides. They are trillion-dollar companies with their own silicon, their own cloud infrastructure and every incentive to reduce their dependency on a single supplier, along with the capital expenditure commitments to show they are following through.

One way to frame the longer-term question is this: demand for AI compute may not be the primary variable for investors to focus on. Who captures the margin from that demand, and at what valuation multiple, may matter just as much. Those are questions each investor may need to weigh against their own risk profile and objectives.

Scenario Disclaimer: The "Next 30 days" and "Next 3 months" scenarios are illustrative "what-if" models for stress-testing a market thesis and identifying potential catalysts. They do not constitute a house view, forecast, guarantee, or prediction of future market movement. Any Brent price targets, Fed policy references, or other market benchmarks are hypothetical only. Real-world conditions are subject to volatility and unforeseen shifts.

GO Markets
May 20, 2026
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AI
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K-shaped consumer playbook: Tesla, AI and the CFD watchlist

The K-shape matters for markets because it breaks the assumption that aggregate data tells you anything useful about individual companies.

A sector can post solid revenue and still have half its members quietly guiding lower. An index can hold while the names inside it move in opposite directions. Afterall, the K is not just a consumer story, it is an earnings story, a margin story and, for active traders, a positioning story.

Where's the money?

Two structural themes sit directly downstream of that same dynamic and neither is a consumer play in the obvious sense. But both are asking the same underlying question: when the economics are stripped back and the narrative is set aside, does the model actually generate a return?

That is what 2026 may test.

Tesla’s Cybercab is asking it about autonomous transport and Microsoft’s Maia 200 is asking it about AI infrastructure. And in each case, markets may start moving well before the headline data confirms the answer.

01
Theme one · Tesla and autonomous transport

The Cybercab:
return on investment comes due in 2026

Tesla has pivoted its strategic narrative from vehicle sales towards service revenue. The Cybercab sits at the centre of that shift in physical form: an autonomous vehicle designed to generate per-mile economics rather than a one-time purchase price. By 2026, the market may want more than a vision. It may want evidence that the model works.

Autonomous vehicle fleet
Autonomous fleet
Traditional ride-share
Traditional ride-share
The margin question behind the Cybercab What to watch
Cost per mile
Cybercab target of US$0.20 to US$0.35 versus traditional ride-share costs of around US$0.60 to US$0.80. The gap between these figures is the margin thesis.
Revenue model
Per-mile service fees, with fleet utilisation likely to be the key driver of whether the economics hold together at scale.
Key hurdle
NHTSA regulatory approvals and the FSD v4 or v5 timeline remain the most consequential variables outside Tesla’s direct control.

The number to watch above all else is fleet utilisation. Low utilisation means fixed hardware costs without the revenue to offset them. High utilisation, if it materialises, may validate the service model and change how markets price Tesla’s long-term earnings potential.

That binary outcome is what gives this theme its weight heading into 2026.

Continue Reading

Scenarios for 2026

Bull case

Tesla achieves below US$0.30 cost per mile. Regulatory approvals broaden faster than expected. Fleet utilisation exceeds 70% in year one of commercial operation.

Cautionary case

Regulatory delays push commercial scaling to 2028 or later. FSD safety incidents trigger scrutiny. Competitors including Waymo expand market share during the window.

Scenario Disclaimer: The "Next 30 days" and "Next 3 months" scenarios are illustrative "what-if" models for stress-testing a market thesis and identifying potential catalysts. They do not constitute a house view, forecast, guarantee, or prediction of future market movement. Any Brent price targets, Fed policy references, or other market benchmarks are hypothetical only. Real-world conditions are subject to volatility and unforeseen shifts.

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Manage your catalysts

Prepare for upcoming events and review your approach before trading.

While Tesla is trying to make autonomous transport economically viable, a quieter shift is happening inside the companies building the AI infrastructure that supports the rest of the economy. It has significant implications for one of the most widely followed stocks in the market.

The hyperscalers, including Microsoft, Google, Amazon and Apple, are increasingly designing their own chips. Not because they want to be in the chip business, but because it may become more efficient than buying from third parties at scale. Microsoft’s Maia 200 is the latest example, and it is worth understanding what it may actually mean.

02
Theme two · AI infrastructure and custom silicon

Maia 200:
the vertical integration of AI

Microsoft’s Maia 200 chip is a specific instance of a broader structural shift: the world’s largest technology companies are moving away from third-party silicon providers and building their own hardware for AI workloads. Google has TPUs. Amazon has Trainium. Apple has its Neural Engine. By 2026, this trend could materially change the competitive landscape for semiconductor investors.

Why custom silicon matters

Custom silicon designed specifically for large language model (LLM) workloads can deliver better energy efficiency, lower per-token inference costs and reduced dependence on external supply chains. For a company running Azure at hyperscale, even a modest improvement in per-unit economics can compound into significant savings at volume.

AI infrastructure stack - vertical integration Layered architecture diagram
Applications layer Copilot · Azure AI · OpenAI partnership Model layer GPT-4o · Phi-3 · Azure OpenAI Cloud infrastructure Azure datacentres · global network Custom silicon · Maia 200 Designed for LLM inference · better efficiency · lower cost/token KEY
Hyperscale AI datacentre
Hyperscale infrastructure
US$650B
Combined capex · 2026 forecast
Market signal
The shift to custom silicon narrows dependency on third-party GPU vendors. Watch NVDA data centre revenue mix as the leading indicator.

The implication for semiconductor investors is not trivial. A more fragmented chip market, where hyperscalers design their own silicon, could structurally reduce the addressable market for dedicated GPU and AI accelerator vendors. The capex cycle may not disappear, but its return profile may improve considerably for the cloud providers deploying it.

Where the outlook could shift

If Azure’s inference cost per token falls materially, that expands the profitability envelope for AI services without needing to raise prices. That would be a meaningful shift in how markets model the earnings trajectory of major cloud providers, and one worth watching closely through 2026.

Scenarios for 2026

Bull case

Maia 200 adoption lowers Microsoft’s AI inference cost by more than 30%. Cloud margins expand. Custom silicon becomes a durable competitive moat for Azure versus AWS and GCP.

Cautionary case

Custom chip development runs behind schedule or underperforms Nvidia H100 and B200 benchmarks. Microsoft maintains Nvidia dependency. Capex savings do not materialise by 2026.

Scenario Disclaimer: The "Next 30 days" and "Next 3 months" scenarios are illustrative "what-if" models for stress-testing a market thesis and identifying potential catalysts. They do not constitute a house view, forecast, guarantee, or prediction of future market movement. Any Brent price targets, Fed policy references, or other market benchmarks are hypothetical only. Real-world conditions are subject to volatility and unforeseen shifts.

What could go wrong:
execution paths and constraints

Three themes. Three distinct stories. But they share a common thread: each depends on execution matching ambition. The K-shaped consumer requires policy to respond at the right pace. The Cybercab requires regulators and economics to align. Custom silicon requires hyperscalers to deliver the efficiency gains they are projecting. That is why the failure paths matter as much as the opportunity cases.

Four failure paths to keep front of mind Macro Read-Through
Credit stress spreads upward
If delinquencies in lower-income cohorts spread into service-sector employment, the downward arm of the K can pull on the broader economy and erode the wealth effect supporting premium spending.
Policy and political intervention
Governments may respond to consumer distress with fiscal measures, targeted support payments or regulatory interventions. These can shift the spending picture quickly and in unexpected directions.
Equity correction weakens wealth effect
Premium consumer confidence is partly psychological. A meaningful equity correction could compress spending from the upper tier rapidly, removing a key support for premium-oriented companies.
Sticky services inflation delays cuts
If upper-tier spending keeps services inflation alive, central banks may stay cautious for longer than markets expect. That narrows the rate-cut path and extends pressure on stretched households.

Execution risk matters more in a divided market

CFDs are leveraged. Wider dispersion can mean larger gap risk around earnings and tighter conditions for stop placement. Position sizing and risk management matter more, not less, when the consumer picture is divided.

General Notice: General information only. Scenarios are illustrative. Real-world conditions are subject to volatility and unforeseen shifts.

Bottom line

The K-shaped consumer is not a new concept, but the version playing out right now has specific characteristics worth paying attention to. The divergence between income tiers is sharp enough to show up in company earnings, broad enough to complicate central bank decisions, and persistent enough to resist easy resolution.

The Cybercab and the Maia 200 are both products of the same underlying shift: markets are moving from rewarding ambition to demanding evidence. The question in 2026 is not whether these technologies are real. It is whether the economics are. Understanding which side of that question a company or sector sits on may be one of the more useful analytical frames available right now.

For traders and investors, the story is not simply “consumer weak” or “consumer strong”. It is more granular than that and more interesting for it.

Follow FX through the Asia session

Stay close to Asia-Pacific themes, regional data, sentiment and key crosses.

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May 6, 2026
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K-shaped consumer explained: CFD watchlist signals for 2026

The “resilient consumer” line being recycled across earnings calls is doing a lot of work. Index-level data helps it along. Headline retail sales hold. Spending looks firm. Stop reading there and the story looks simple.

But it is not.

Underneath sits a split-screen economy, the K-shape, where one consumer is carried by asset wealth, US large-cap exposure and the AI rally, while another is stuck with the less glamorous arithmetic of petrol, credit card minimums and a car loan that gets harder to service with each statement.

For CFD traders, the average is the problem. What matters is which side of the K a stock, sector or currency pair is exposed to, because that is where margins, earnings guidance, single-stock CFDs, index performance, commodities and FX may start telling a more divided story.

The big "K"

The "K" is just a chart shape. One arm angles up. The other angles down. Apply that shape to households and you get a workable model of who is benefiting from the current cycle, and who is being squeezed by it.

The upper arm, where asset wealth is doing the heavy lifting

The upper arm is asset-rich. These households own homes, hold the bulk of equity exposure and have benefited from the AI-linked rally in US large-cap equities. Net worth has been rising faster than inflation, which means their spending may be less price-sensitive and less reliant on borrowing. Roughly 87 per cent of all US equities sit with the top 10 per cent of households and that concentration matters when markets rally, because the wealth effect lands in fewer pockets than people assume.

The K-shaped consumer One economy, two very different households
Upper arm
Wealth is still growing
+28%
US equity wealth, 12 months
Growth: Big Tech and AI stocks have helped wealth grow
Spending: Higher earners are still spending freely
Demand: Luxury and travel demand remain strong
Lower arm
Budgets are under pressure
2010
Auto loan stress near post-GFC highs
Prices: Much higher than levels seen in 2021
Credit: Card stress is rising across households
Timing: Pressure builds before headline data updates
Bull case
Rate cuts may give some relief
Caution
Stress could weaken broader spending
Disclaimer: This graphic is for general informational purposes only and presents scenario-based commentary, not financial advice or a recommendation to buy, sell or hold any security or financial product. References to equity wealth growth, auto-loan stress, household credit conditions and consumer spending are based on available Federal Reserve and New York Fed data as at May 2026 and may be revised. Historical comparisons and market performance, including AI-related equity gains, are not reliable indicators of future outcomes. Actual consumer, market and economic conditions may differ materially from those implied by the “Bull Case” or “Caution” scenarios.
The lower arm, where pressure shows up first

The lower arm tells a different story. With official US inflation still around 3.7 per cent, lower-income earners are spending more on essentials and falling back on credit. Auto loan delinquencies have climbed to their highest level since 2010.

That is not a recession signal on its own. It is a strain signal. And because strain rarely stays neatly contained, it can start to show up in the spending mix before it shows up in the headline data.

The clue markets cannot ignore

The punchline is this: the top 20 per cent of US earners now account for more than 60 per cent of total retail spend. Once you internalise that, a lot of consumer-stock charts start to make more sense.

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Prepare for upcoming events and review your approach before trading.

We have been here before

Same K-shape, faster upper arm

The split is not new, after all markets have seen versions of this before, because every few cycles, the same uncomfortable pattern comes back into view: one part of the consumer economy keeps moving, while another starts to drag.

Same K-shape,

faster upper arm

The K-shape is not new. What is different in 2026 is the speed and concentration of the upper arm. AI-linked equity wealth has supercharged the asset-rich consumer faster than in any earlier dispersion cycles.

~35%
~40%
~43%
~49%
01 · Dot-com Era

First sustained dispersion

Top 5 per cent income growth ran 4.1 per cent a year. Equity ownership began to concentrate significantly, marking the first modern iteration of the split.

Sources: Moody’s Analytics review of Federal Reserve data via Bloomberg, Sept 2025. Pew Research Center. IMF Finance & Development. Federal Reserve FEDS Notes.

Why the K-shape matters for CFDs

Aggregate data, such as headline retail sales, total consumer credit and broad index moves, averages everyone together. In a single-consumer economy, that average is useful but in a K-shaped economy, the average can mislead. What matters is which side of the K a company sits on and whether the price reflects that.

How the K reaches your screen
Step 01
Customer mix splits
Upper and lower arms spend differently.
Step 02
Earnings diverge
Margins, guidance, and credit profiles split.
Step 03
CFDs reprice
Where the trader sees the move on platform.
A simplified transmission view. Real-world price moves reflect many overlapping macroeconomic drivers.

That changes the way three things behave.

1. Dispersion: Two stocks in the same sector can post very different earnings depending on who their customer is. An index move can mask that. A single-stock CFD does not. A luxury retailer and a value retailer may both sit inside the consumer universe, but they are not trading the same household balance sheet. A premium travel name and a budget operator may both report on travel demand, but the customer mix can make the earnings story very different.

For traders, the sector label is only the first layer. The customer base is the second.

2. Margin pressure: Companies serving the lower arm may be increasingly forced to discount. PepsiCo, for example, has cut prices on certain snack lines by around 15 per cent. Margin compression at the bottom often does not show up in headline beats. It can show up later in guidance.

That is where CFD traders need to be careful with the first read. A company can beat revenue expectations and still guide cautiously if it had to protect volume with promotions, price cuts or weaker margins.

3. Credit signals: Big banks publish their own K-shaped commentary every quarter. JPMorgan’s recent quarterly update flagged that higher-income borrowers are holding up while lower-income cohorts are showing more strain in credit card charge-offs. JPMorgan reported managed revenue of US$50.5 billion in its most recent quarter. The headline is one thing. The K-shaped colour commentary inside the release is another.

That kind of language has, in past cycles, preceded a wider repricing of consumer-facing names. It does not guarantee one this time.

CFD sector examples

One way to analyse the K-consumer theme is to compare companies in pairs rather than looking only at single names. This is not about deciding which stock is good or bad. It is an illustrative way to compare how different customer bases may influence market commentary and price behaviour.

The CFD trader's watchlist
SectorUpper-armLower-armMonitoring
RetailLVMH, HermèsWalmart, TJXPricing power
TravelDelta, MarriottSpirit AirlinesLoad factors
AutosFerrari, PorscheFord, GMFinancing stress
HousingToll BrothersRocket CompaniesAffordability

Source attribution and disclaimer: Data and examples are drawn from S&P Global Market Intelligence, Federal Reserve Distributional Financial Accounts, ASX company announcements, RBA household credit data, PepsiCo’s February 2026 strategic update and Wesfarmers’ 2026 half-year results. Companies are categorised by their primary revenue-generating demographic based on recent annual reporting. The “CFD Trader’s Watchlist” is provided for general information and educational commentary only. Company names are used to illustrate the “K-shaped consumer” theme and are not financial advice, a recommendation, or a solicitation to buy, sell or hold any security, CFD, derivative or other financial product.

How the split reaches APAC screens

For Australian CFD traders, the K-consumer theme can reach local screens through three channels the US names alone do not capture:

1. Direct ASX read-throughs

The APAC tab in the watchlist maps the K onto Australian consumer names. Wesfarmers does most of the heavy lifting, because Kmart and Bunnings sit on opposite arms of the same business. Endeavour and Coles play discretionary against defensive in staples. Flight Centre and Webjet do the same in travel. Macquarie and Latitude split the credit story.

2. The China-luxury feedback loop

The upper arm is not only a US story. LVMH, Hermès and Richemont sit downstream of the high-end Chinese consumer. A softer luxury read in Asia can move broader risk appetite, mining sentiment and AUD/USD before it shows up in US data, which is why luxury can be an early signal.

3. AUD/USD as the macro carrier

A stretched US lower arm may push the Federal Reserve toward a more dovish stance. That could pressure the US dollar and support AUD/USD, depending on commodity sentiment and the RBA. The K-consumer story is not always a retail story. Sometimes it shows up in FX first.

Forward outlook

How the theme could play out

Base

Bank charge-off rates and discretionary retailer guidance start to confirm or unwind the dispersion narrative.

Upside

AI-linked equity gains keep feeding the wealth effect at the top end.

Downside

The next consumer credit report shows further deterioration in lower-income cohorts.

Watch list

Fed commentary on financial conditions, US consumer credit prints, bank earnings language and ASX consumer names.

Base

The K persists into mid-year, with broad indices continuing to mask it.

Upside

Rate cuts begin lifting both arms unevenly, with rate-sensitive, lower-income households getting some relief.

Downside

A sustained Brent move above US$120 pressures mid-tier discretionary spend and forces earnings downgrades.

Watch list

Fed dot plot revisions, oil supply shocks, retailer guidance, China luxury demand, AUD/USD and mining sentiment.

Scenario disclaimer: The “Next 30 days” and “Next 3 months” scenarios are illustrative “what-if” models for stress-testing a market thesis and identifying potential catalysts. They are not a house view, forecast, guarantee, or prediction of future market movement. Any Brent price targets, Fed policy references, or other market benchmarks are hypothetical only.

Continue Reading
Failure paths

Where the framework could break

Upper-arm reversal

If the AI rally rolls over, upper-arm spending could weaken faster than the data has suggested.

China factor

Luxury demand can weaken if China's high-end consumer slows.

Energy reversal

If energy prices fall rather than spike, the lower-arm squeeze eases and the dispersion trade unwinds.

AUD/USD divergence

AUD/USD can move against expectations if commodity prices fall or the RBA deviates from global policy paths.

Already priced in

By the time a theme is widely discussed, much of the move may already be priced into the instruments.

Execution

CFDs are leveraged. Wider dispersion can mean larger gap risk around earnings and tighter conditions for stop placement.

General information only. Scenarios are illustrative. Real-world conditions are subject to volatility and unforeseen shifts.

The bottom line

The K is not a forecast. It is a lens. It forces the question headline data ignores: whose consumer am I actually trading?

For CFD traders, answering that can be the difference between an index move and a single-stock CFD that tells the opposite story.

The next test is threefold:

  1. Earnings: Does upper-arm demand hold as luxury and tech reports land?
  2. Energy: Does Brent stay contained below US$90, or does a spike further squeeze the lower-arm budget?
  3. Credit: Does bank commentary continue to flag the income split JPMorgan called out this quarter?

The work is not to predict the break. It is to decide your response before it happens. By the time the headline lands, the price, and the opportunity, may have already moved.

Next week: Tesla, AI infrastructure and how the same dispersion logic plays out one layer up the stack.

Make your next move count

Stay sharp with watchlists, charts and alerts as conditions change.

GO Markets
May 6, 2026
AI
US Earnings
US earnings preview: Wall Street wants answers from Meta, Amazon and Apple

We have spent the last three instalments of this series mapping the plumbing of the 2026 economy: the banks that anchor the capital, the utilities that supply the electrons, and the chipmakers building the silicon. As the April reporting season moves into its final act, attention shifts to the front door.

Meta, Amazon and Apple sit at the point where the AI buildout meets everyday consumers and businesses.

Why return on investment is now the focus

A hard divide, sometimes called the “Great Dispersion”, is opening between companies that enable AI and companies that monetise it. Meta and Amazon are at the centre of a massive capital expenditure (capex) cycle, against an estimated industry-wide spend of roughly US$650 billion to US$700 billion in 2026.

That is why return on investment (ROI) metrics are front of mind.

  1. Is Meta’s AI-driven ad targeting strong enough to justify its spending programme?
  2. Is Amazon Web Services (AWS) re-accelerating fast enough to support the custom silicon push?
  3. Can Apple hold its premium valuation by showing the iPhone 17 cycle is real, even in a more difficult Chinese market?

In 2026, the question is no longer only who can build the data centres. It is who can turn those investments into sustainable, high-margin profit. With energy markets calmer after the recent ceasefire, technology valuations have had some room to breathe. Now the market wants evidence.

IMPORTANT: REPORTING SCHEDULES CAN CHANGE WITHOUT NOTICE. REPORTING DATES AND RELEASE TIMES ARE FROM COMPANY INVESTOR RELATIONS CALENDARS WHERE MARKED CONFIRMED; OTHERWISE THEY ARE GO MARKETS ESTIMATES. CONSENSUS EPS, REVENUE AND ANALYST-RANGE DATA ARE FROM THIRD-PARTY MARKET CONSENSUS SOURCES, AS OF 20 APRIL 2026 (AEST). COMPANY GUIDANCE, BACKLOG AND OPERATING METRICS ARE FROM THE LATEST COMPANY FILINGS OR RESULTS PRESENTATIONS UNLESS STATED OTHERWISE. FIGURES AND SCHEDULES MAY CHANGE WITHOUT NOTICE.

$META | Q1 2026 REPORTING PERIOD

Meta Platforms, Inc.

NASDAQ | Technology/Advertising | 29 Apr 2026
✓ CONFIRMED

Global Release Countdown (AMC)

00:00:00:00
Reported EPS
US$10.44
Reported Revenue
US$56.31bn
AUSTRALIA/ASIA 30 Apr | 6:05 am
US/LATAM 29 Apr | 4:05 pm
Market intelligence: $META

Analysis: Meta price drivers and scenarios

Ad click improvement (est.)
+3–5%
From AI-driven targeting
2026 capex estimate
~US$135bn
Market estimate range
Silicon strategy
MTIA 2nm
Broadcom co-development
Strategy note

What is MTIA 2nm? This is Meta's "home-grown" AI chip. The 2nm refers to ultra-advanced, high-efficiency technology. By building their own silicon with Broadcom, Meta aims to slash their massive electricity bills and end their total reliance on buying expensive NVIDIA hardware. If this works, it protects Meta's profit margins even if they keep spending billions on AI.

AVG
LOW US$6.30 AVG US$6.69 HIGH US$7.10

Meta has moved from its "Year of Efficiency" into what CEO Mark Zuckerberg calls the "Era of Personal Superintelligence". By April 2026, AI appears to have sharpened the company’s core advertising engine, with some reports suggesting ad click rates rose by around 3% to 5%. But the bigger strategic issue is Meta’s multi-year Broadcom partnership to co-develop custom 2nm MTIA chips, with the aim of reducing reliance on NVIDIA and lowering operating costs over time. The risk is that Meta could beat on earnings and still disappoint if management points to higher spending and a longer payoff period. The real question is whether efficiency gains are keeping pace with the capital expenditure (capex) bill.

Call focus and key signals

The Avocado AI model
Watch for ad click improvements tied to the "Avocado" AI model deployment, currently estimated to be lifting rates by up to 5%.
Signal: Monetisation efficiency
MTIA rollout status
Updates on the custom 2nm MTIA chip rollout with Broadcom will indicate Meta's long term cost structure flexibility.
Watch: Infrastructure independence
Reality Labs losses
Evidence of Reality Labs loss stabilisation would reduce the persistent drag on the overall earnings story.
Watch: Operating loss trend
Capex vs efficiency
The real question for investors is whether efficiency gains are keeping pace with the significant capex bill.
Signal: Spending productivity
Sentiment analysis: Meta Platforms

Interactive scenario analysis: $META

Select earnings outcome
Productive cycle

Spending cycle becomes productive

EPS above US$7.10, double-digit ad growth, and clear early efficiency gains from MTIA. The market may interpret that as a sign the spending cycle is becoming more productive rather than simply more expensive.
EPS level
Above US$7.10
Ad growth
Double digit
Efficiency
MTIA gains
Reaction
Strong rally
Sources & Data Methodology

Sources: Reporting dates and release times are from company investor relations calendars where marked Confirmed; otherwise they are GO Markets estimates. Consensus EPS, revenue and analyst-range data are sourced from Bloomberg and Earnings Whispers, as at 20 April 2026 (AEST). Company guidance, backlog and operating metrics are sourced from the latest company filings or results presentations. Any scenario analysis reflects GO Markets analysis. Figures and schedules may change without notice.

Expanded Coverage

Beyond the chipmakers

As the "show me the money" year unfolds, discover how AI demand is impacting Tesla, NextEra, and Exxon.

Amazon: the capex bet moves to centre stage

Amazon is no longer just a retail story. It is increasingly a cloud and advertising business, with a thin-margin logistics network attached. In 2026, the narrative is centred on what reports have described as a roughly US$200 billion capex plan, aimed largely at building out AWS’s AI infrastructure.

$AMZN | Q1 2026 REPORTING PERIOD

Amazon.com, Inc.

NASDAQ | Technology/Retail | 29 Apr 2026
✓ CONFIRMED

Global Release Countdown (AMC)

00:00:00:00
Reported EPS
US$2.78
Reported Revenue
US$181.5bn
AU/ASIA 30 Apr | 6:00 am
US/LATAM 29 Apr | 4:00 pm
Market Intelligence: $AMZN

Analysis: Amazon price drivers and scenarios

AWS growth threshold
20% YoY
Market floor expectation
2026 Capex plan (est.)
~US$200bn
Largely AWS AI infrastructure
Custom silicon
Trainium 3 and 4
In-house AI chip pipeline
AVG
LOW US$1.50 AVG US$1.69 HIGH US$1.90

Amazon is no longer primarily a retail story. In 2026, the narrative centres on approximately US$200 billion in planned capex, directed largely at building out AWS's AI infrastructure. That is an extraordinary commitment, and the market is watching closely to see whether the returns are following. One metric matters most: AWS growth.

Key signals to watch

AWS growth rate
Anything materially below 20% YoY could reinforce the bear case that spending is running well ahead of returns.
Watch: AWS growth vs 20% floor
Trainium supply commitments
Early supply commitments for Trainium 3 and 4 would signal how quickly the transition to in-house chips is progressing.
Watch: Trainium 3 and 4 progress
Retail margins under tariff pressure
Management commentary on whether Section 122 tariff costs are being absorbed or passed on is vital for the non-AWS story.
Watch: Retail operating margin
Advertising segment momentum
Sustained growth here provides a high-margin earnings cushion if retail margins are squeezed by logistics or tariffs.
Watch: Advertising revenue growth
Sentiment Analysis · Amazon.com Inc.

Interactive scenario analysis: $AMZN

Select earnings outcome
Investment Landing

Spending cycle lands well

EPS above US$1.90 and AWS growth above 24% with firmer retail margins. The market interprets this as proof the massive investment cycle is delivering efficient returns.
EPS Level
Above US$1.90
AWS Signal
Above 24%
Retail Margin
Firmer
Reaction
Positive rally
Sources & Data Methodology

Sources: Reporting dates and release times are from company investor relations calendars where marked Confirmed; otherwise they are GO Markets estimates. Consensus EPS, revenue and analyst-range data are sourced from Bloomberg and Earnings Whispers, as at 20 April 2026 (AEST). Company guidance, backlog and operating metrics are sourced from the latest company filings or results presentations. Any scenario analysis reflects GO Markets analysis. Figures and schedules may change without notice.

Apple: quality still needs proof

Apple has looked like the defensive favourite in hardware, helped by record free cash flow (FCF) of US$43.64 billion and the strength of its Services segment. But the latest debate is whether that defensive status can turn back into growth. Third-party shipment data has indicated a roughly 20% rise in China for iPhone 17, challenging the idea that the market is already mature.

$AAPL | Q2 FY2026 REPORTING PERIOD

Apple Inc.

NASDAQ | Consumer Technology | 30 Apr 2026
✓ CONFIRMED

Global Release Countdown (AMC)

00:00:00:00
Consensus EPS
US$1.91
Consensus Revenue
~US$109.0bn
AU/ASIA 01 May | 6:30 am
US/LATAM 30 Apr | 4:30 pm
Market intelligence: $AAPL

Analysis: Apple price drivers and scenarios

Free cash flow (FCF)
US$43.6bn
Record, prior period
Services run-rate target
~US$30bn
Quarterly revenue approach
China iPhone 17 shipments
+~20%
Third-party data estimate
AVG
LOW US$1.70 AVG US$1.91 HIGH US$1.94

Apple is still widely seen as a quality print, but expectations are higher now. Margin resilience alone is no longer enough. The market wants evidence that Apple Intelligence, the company’s on-device AI platform, can extend the upgrade cycle and support more recurring, high-margin Services revenue over time.

Key signals to watch

iPhone 17 demand in China
China remains the most closely watched variable. Third-party data has pointed to growth of around 20%, but earnings will provide the first company-sourced data point.
Watch: China revenue growth
Services revenue trajectory
Services is approaching a US$30 billion quarterly run rate and carries structurally higher margins. Further acceleration reduces reliance on iPhone cycle volatility.
Watch: Services revenue vs US$30bn
Apple Intelligence rollout
On-device AI is a key upgrade catalyst. Management commentary on adoption, features and international timing will shape refresh cycle expectations.
Watch: Apple intelligence milestones
Gross margin
Apple guided to a 48% to 49% range. Holding near the top signals product mix strength. A result below 48% raises questions about cost pressure.
Watch: Gross margin vs 48% to 49%
Sentiment analysis: Apple Inc.

Interactive scenario analysis: $AAPL

Select report outcome
Growth support

Support for growth narrative

EPS above US$1.94, firmer China iPhone 17 data and gross margin above 49%. The market may interpret that as support for the higher-quality growth narrative and validate the thesis that Apple Intelligence is beginning to drive a meaningful upgrade cycle.
EPS level
Above US$1.94
China demand
Firmer
Gross margin
Above 49%
Reaction
Bullish move
Sources & Data Methodology

Sources: Reporting dates and release times are from company investor relations calendars where marked Confirmed; otherwise they are GO Markets estimates. Consensus EPS, revenue and analyst-range data are sourced from Bloomberg and Earnings Whispers, as at 20 April 2026 (AEST). Company guidance, backlog and operating metrics are sourced from the latest company filings or results presentations. Any scenario analysis reflects GO Markets analysis. Figures and schedules may change without notice.

Thematic risks

What could shift the picture

Three risks could change the narrative, regardless of how the numbers print.

1. Spending without visible returns

Meta and Amazon are both running enormous capex programmes, with payoff periods that stretch well beyond a single quarter. If either company delivers an in line or weaker result while also lifting full year spending guidance, the market may start to see the gap between investment and return as a structural issue rather than a temporary one. That would matter for the sector as a whole, not just for one stock.

2. China as a variable, not a constant

Apple's China story has shown some resilience in third party data, but it remains sensitive to trade policy, consumer confidence and local competition. Any signal from management that demand is softening faster than expected, or that local rivals are gaining meaningful share in the mid range and premium segments, could reset the earnings growth outlook more quickly than consensus currently assumes.

3. The K-shaped consumer backdrop

In a market where higher income consumers are holding up while lower income groups remain under pressure, ad spending patterns and device upgrade cycles can diverge sharply from headline averages. If Meta's ad pricing weakens because smaller businesses pull back, or if Apple's upgrade cycle is concentrated within a narrower demographic, results could disappoint even with broadly stable macro conditions.

Note: These thematic risks may influence sector wide risk appetite independently of headline EPS results.
The bottom line

The 2026 reality check

As this earnings season moves towards its close, the story is shifting away from survival and towards operational execution in the intelligence era.

$META

AI ad efficiency is facing its biggest test yet. Can the Broadcom silicon bet start to show up in margins?

$AMZN

AWS re-acceleration remains the critical signal. A US$200 billion capex push needs a growth rate to match.

$AAPL

Quality still needs proof. Apple Intelligence has to show it can extend the upgrade cycle, not just refresh it.

For Meta, Amazon and Apple, the test is whether heavy investment in silicon, models and infrastructure is turning into measurable cash flow and durable margins. In a more uneven economy, the market appears to be rewarding companies that can show real demand and clearer monetisation. The earnings numbers matter, but management commentary on the return on that investment may matter more.

Your next earnings setup starts here

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GO Markets
April 20, 2026
Microsoft, Alphabet and NVIDIA sit at the centre of the AI infrastructure buildout, from cloud and enterprise software to custom chips and data-centre demand. Their upcoming results may help show whether heavy capital spending is translating into revenue, margins and durable competitive advantage.
AI
US Earnings
Are Microsoft, Alphabet and NVIDIA about to show whether AI is worth the cost?

April's US earnings season is landing in a market that wants more than a good story. JPMorgan has already set a high bar with a strong result, and attention is now shifting to the engine room of the S&P 500: AI infrastructure where three companies are at the centre of that story.

Why this earnings window matters for AI

Microsoft, Alphabet and NVIDIA are not just participants in the AI cycle, they are building the physical and software architecture that other companies depend on: the chips, the cloud regions, the models and the tools. If this spending is going to deliver returns, the first signs may start to show in their quarterly results over the next few weeks.

Each company represents a different test.

  1. Microsoft: Whether enterprise AI adoption is translating into revenue and margin expansion
  2. Alphabet: Whether owning the full stack, from chips to cloud to distribution, is a durable advantage or simply an expensive position to defend
  3. NVIDIA: Whether the hardware cycle is still holding, accelerating or starting to level out

In 2026, the question is no longer whether AI investment is happening, the capital commitments are substantial and already publicly stated. The question is whether that spending is generating returns quickly enough to justify the scale of those bets.

IMPORTANT: REPORTING SCHEDULES CAN CHANGE WITHOUT NOTICE. REPORTING DATES AND RELEASE TIMES ARE FROM COMPANY INVESTOR RELATIONS CALENDARS WHERE MARKED CONFIRMED; OTHERWISE THEY ARE GO MARKETS ESTIMATES. CONSENSUS EPS, REVENUE AND ANALYST-RANGE DATA ARE FROM THIRD-PARTY MARKET CONSENSUS SOURCES, AS OF 16 APRIL 2026 (AEST). COMPANY GUIDANCE, BACKLOG AND OPERATING METRICS ARE FROM THE LATEST COMPANY FILINGS OR RESULTS PRESENTATIONS UNLESS STATED OTHERWISE. FIGURES AND SCHEDULES MAY CHANGE WITHOUT NOTICE.

$MSFT | Q1 2026 REPORTING PERIOD

Microsoft Corporation

NASDAQ | Technology | 29 Apr 2026
Confirmed

Global Release Countdown (AMC)

00:00:00:00
Reported EPS
US$4.27
Reported Revenue
US$82.9bn
AU/ASIA 30 Apr | 6:05 am
US/LATAM 29 Apr | 4:05 pm
Market Intelligence: $MSFT

Analysis: Microsoft price drivers and scenarios

Azure Growth Target
37-38%
Constant currency projection
AI Contribution
+6-8 pts
Azure revenue from AI services
FY26 Capex
US$146bn
Total infrastructure spending
AVG
LOW US$3.86 AVG US$4.04 HIGH US$4.14

Microsoft is being tested on a specific question: can it turn heavy AI spending into margin expansion? A result above US$4.14 could ease concerns over "capex fatigue" and demonstrate whether Azure growth is re-accelerating alongside enterprise AI adoption.

Factors that could move the markets

Azure growth rate
Watch if constant-currency growth re-accelerates above 39%, suggesting AI workloads are filling new capacity rather than sitting idle.
Signal: Capacity Utilisation
Workplace agent adoption
The shift to autonomous agents is central. Clear enterprise uptake in Dynamics 365 supports the high-tier subscription thesis.
Signal: Software Monetisation
Maia 200 cost savings
If the in-house AI chip is lowering inference costs at production levels, gross margins may start to recover from recent compression.
Watch: Gross Margin Recovery
Regulatory backdrop
Ongoing scrutiny of cloud bundling practices remains a potential headwind; management commentary here is vital for the long-term view.
Watch: Bundling Compliance
Sentiment Analysis · Microsoft Corp.

Interactive scenario analysis: $MSFT

Select earnings outcome
AI Scaling Proof

Strong result, backed by real AI progress

EPS above US$4.14 and Azure re-acceleration above 39% could support the view that AI spending is starting to translate into commercial returns. Workplace Agents show measurable ROI and FY26 guidance is raised.
EPS Outcome
Above US$4.14
Cloud Signal
Accelerating
Guidance
Raised
Possible reaction
Strong rally
Sources & Data Methodology

Sources: Reporting dates and release times are from company investor relations calendars where marked Confirmed; otherwise they are GO Markets estimates. Consensus EPS, revenue and analyst-range data are sourced from Bloomberg and Earnings Whispers, as at 16 April 2026 (AEST). Company guidance, backlog and operating metrics are sourced from the latest company filings or results presentations. Any scenario analysis reflects GO Markets analysis. Figures and schedules may change without notice.

Expanded Coverage

Beyond the chipmakers

As the "show me the money" year unfolds, discover how AI demand is impacting Tesla, NextEra, and Exxon.

Alphabet: search to infrastructure

Alphabet has transformed from a search business into a sprawling AI infrastructure play, and this result will test whether that transformation is delivering. The US$185 billion capex forecast for 2026 is extraordinary, close to double last year's spending.

EPS is expected to decline slightly year on year, precisely because that infrastructure spending is consuming capital. The question is whether Google Cloud's growth is fast enough to show a credible path back to margin recovery, and whether Ironwood, the seventh-generation custom AI chip, is proving its cost-per-query advantage at scale.

$GOOGL | Q1 2026 REPORTING PERIOD

Alphabet Inc.

NASDAQ | Technology | 29 Apr 2026
Confirmed

Global Release Countdown (AMC)

00:00:00:00
Reported EPS
US$5.11
Reported Revenue
US$109.9bn
AU/ASIA 30 Apr | 6:30 am
US/LATAM 29 Apr | 4:30 pm
Market Intelligence: $GOOGL

Analysis: Alphabet price drivers and scenarios

Cloud growth
48% YoY
Compared with last quarter
Ironwood TPU
10x peak
Vs previous-generation chip
2026 Capex
US$185bn
Double last year's spending
AVG
LOW US$2.50 AVG US$2.64 HIGH US$2.80

Alphabet has shifted to being viewed as a broader AI infrastructure play. The question is whether Cloud growth can support a path back to margin recovery while the massive US$185bn infrastructure buildout absorbs capital.

Factors that could move the markets

Google Cloud momentum
Markets are watching if the 48% growth rate holds, specifically among customers using Ironwood TPUs for large-scale AI.
Signal: Enterprise AI Adoption
Search & AI overview
If compute-intensive AI summaries are monetising through ads, it supports core search economics in the AI era.
Focus: Search Economics
Capex & margin trajectory
With free cash flow under pressure from US$185bn capex, markets want to know when infrastructure investment will moderate.
Watch: Spending Ceiling
DOJ antitrust risk
Management commentary on the legal timeline for Chrome or Android divestiture appeals will influence how risk is priced.
Watch: Regulatory Remedies
Sentiment Analysis · Alphabet Inc.

Interactive scenario analysis: $GOOGL

Select earnings outcome
Efficiency Proof

Ironwood efficiency drives upside

EPS above US$2.80 and cloud growth above 45% suggest Ironwood is cutting costs and strengthening Google’s advantage faster than expected.
EPS outcome
Above US$2.80
Cloud Signal
Strong growth
Waymo
Accelerating
Reaction
Sentiment improves
Sources & Data Methodology

Sources: Reporting dates and release times are from company investor relations calendars where marked Confirmed; otherwise they are GO Markets estimates. Consensus EPS, revenue and analyst-range data are sourced from Bloomberg and Earnings Whispers, as at 16 April 2026 (AEST). Company guidance, backlog and operating metrics are sourced from the latest company filings or results presentations. Any scenario analysis reflects GO Markets analysis. Figures and schedules may change without notice.

NVIDIA: the hardware cycle read through

NVIDIA is no longer simply a chip company. It has become what analysts now describe as the central bank of compute, the entity whose product determines how much AI capacity the world can actually deploy.

The upcoming Q1 FY2027 result will test whether the new Vera Rubin R100 GPU architecture, which entered mass production ahead of schedule, is already contributing to revenue, and whether NVIDIA can sustain gross margins above 75% as inference, rather than training, becomes the dominant workload. Inference is more competitive and more price-sensitive than training, so margin resilience here matters.

$NVDA | 2026财年第一季度报告期

英伟达 (NVIDIA Corporation)

纳斯达克 | 半导体板块 | 2026年5月20日
已确认

全球财报发布倒计时 (AMC 盘后)

00:00:00:00
财报每股收益 (EPS)
1.87 美元
财报营业收入
816.2 亿美元
澳洲 / 亚洲时间 5月21日 | 06:30
美国 / 拉美时间 5月20日 | 16:30
Market Intelligence: $NVDA

Analysis: NVIDIA price drivers and scenarios

Revenue growth
73% YoY
Last quarter benchmark
Data centre share
91%+
Share of total revenue
Rubin R100
In production
Mass production began April 2026
AVG
LOW US$76bn AVG US$78bn HIGH US$81bn+

NVIDIA’s outlook depends on whether Rubin R100 can keep gross margins above 75% as inference becomes a bigger part of demand. Because inference is more price-sensitive than training, margins are the key test.

Factors that could move the markets

Rubin ramp-up
Watch whether Rubin production can scale smoothly without disrupting the Blackwell transition.
Signal: supply chain continuity
Inference margins
The key test is whether NVIDIA can keep gross margins above 75% as inference revenue grows.
Signal: pricing power holds up
Sovereign AI demand
Government-backed investment in Europe and the Middle East could broaden the base beyond hyperscalers.
Signal: market expansion
CUDA regulatory risk
Any US or European scrutiny of NVIDIA’s software advantage could move the stock regardless of the revenue result.
Signal: software moat under review
Sentiment Analysis · NVIDIA Corp.

Interactive scenario analysis: $NVDA

Select earnings outcome
Rubin ramp supports growth

Rubin ramp supports growth

Revenue above US$81 billion may suggest the Rubin ramp is tracking ahead of expectations. That could support the view that AI demand is broadening into sovereign AI and enterprise markets, helping extend visibility into 2027.
Revenue Outcome
Above US$81bn
Gross Margin
Above 75%
Workload
Inference strong
Reaction
Positive read-through
Sources & Data Methodology

Sources: Reporting dates and release times are from company investor relations calendars where marked Confirmed; otherwise they are GO Markets estimates. Consensus EPS, revenue and analyst-range data are sourced from Bloomberg and Earnings Whispers, as at 16 April 2026 (AEST). Company guidance, backlog and operating metrics are sourced from the latest company filings or results presentations. Any scenario analysis reflects GO Markets analysis. Figures and schedules may change without notice.

Thematic Risks

What could shift the picture

Three risks could change the narrative regardless of how the numbers print. Each one is worth understanding before the results land.

Capex fatigue

If both Microsoft and Alphabet report in line or below expectations while reaffirming enormous spending plans, the market may start pricing the risk that AI monetisation is slower than the spending implies. That is not a stock-specific concern. It would be a broader de-rating event, affecting the valuations of companies across the technology sector.

Regulatory escalation

The FTC investigation into Microsoft, the DOJ case against Alphabet, and emerging EU scrutiny of NVIDIA's CUDA software ecosystem are all active. A material legal development before the earnings calls could overshadow the financial results entirely. Regulatory risk in this sector is not theoretical. It is live and moving.

Competition from custom silicon

Microsoft's Maia 200 chip, Alphabet's Ironwood TPU, Amazon's Trainium and Meta's custom accelerators are all reducing how much the large cloud companies depend on NVIDIA hardware. If any of these companies signals a meaningful shift in its GPU procurement plans, that could create uncertainty around NVIDIA's forward order book.

Note: These systemic risks represent thematic pivots that may influence risk appetite independently of headline EPS beats.
The Bottom Line

The 2026 reality check

Microsoft and Alphabet report on the same evening, 29 April. NVIDIA follows in late May. Together, they offer the clearest read yet on whether the AI infrastructure buildout is generating returns fast enough to justify the extraordinary scale of capital being committed.

$MSFT

AI spend is shifting from cost to competitive advantage. The question is whether margins can follow.

$GOOGL

Vertical integration from chips to search to cloud may prove to be a moat, or an expensive position to defend.

$NVDA

This is the pulse of the AI hardware cycle, and a test of whether Rubin can keep the supercycle alive into 2027.

Taken together, they offer a read on a market that looks more physical, more capital-intensive and, for many traders, more real.

Your next earnings setup starts here

Stay ahead of major beats, misses, and market surprises. Log in to your terminal, open a new account, or explore our dedicated earnings academy.

Need help? Contact our support team

GO Markets
April 16, 2026
Why Tesla NextEra and Exxon matter this earnings season, what to watch in Tesla earnings 2026, how AI power demand affects NextEra Energy, what Exxon Mobil earnings could signal for oil markets, Tesla Megapack growth outlook 2026, NextEra data centre power demand explained, Exxon Mobil oil supply risk outlook, energy stocks to watch in April 2026
AI
Commodity
Tesla, NextEra and Exxon: Oil vs. AI demand this US earnings season

April’s US earnings season is landing in a market that wants more than a good story. As GO Markets highlighted in its recent defence earnings watchlist, this reporting period is arriving after a broader shift in what markets care about. It is no longer just about growth at any cost. Traders want to know what the numbers are saying beneath the surface.

Why these 3 names matter

In this part of the market, that brings Tesla, NextEra Energy and Exxon Mobil into focus. Each offers a different read on a key 2026 theme: autonomy, electricity demand and oil supply risk.

  1. Tesla: Is being judged on whether autonomy and energy can support the next stage of growth
  2. NextEra: Offers a window into rising power demand and the infrastructure needed to meet it
  3. Exxon Mobil: Sits at the centre of the oil and energy security story as supply risks stay in focus

Taken together, these three names help explain where attention may be shifting. The question is no longer just who has the strongest narrative, rather, who can show real demand, firmer margins and execution that holds up in a more complicated backdrop.

In 2026, AI power demand is pushing utilities, storage and grid capacity into sharper focus while at the same time, oil supply risk has brought energy security back into the market conversation.

IMPORTANT: REPORTING SCHEDULES CAN CHANGE WITHOUT NOTICE. REPORTING DATES AND RELEASE TIMES ARE FROM COMPANY INVESTOR RELATIONS CALENDARS WHERE MARKED CONFIRMED; OTHERWISE THEY ARE GO MARKETS ESTIMATES. CONSENSUS EPS, REVENUE AND ANALYST-RANGE DATA ARE FROM THIRD-PARTY MARKET CONSENSUS SOURCES, AS OF 14 APRIL 2026 (AEST). COMPANY GUIDANCE, BACKLOG AND OPERATING METRICS ARE FROM THE LATEST COMPANY FILINGS OR RESULTS PRESENTATIONS UNLESS STATED OTHERWISE. FIGURES AND SCHEDULES MAY CHANGE WITHOUT NOTICE.

$TSLA | Q1 2026 REPORTING PERIOD

Tesla Inc.

NASDAQ | Consumer Discretionary | 22 Apr 2026
Confirmed

Global Release Countdown (AMC)

00:00:00:00
Reported EPS
US$0.37
Reported Revenue
US$22.3bn
AU/ASIA 23 Apr | 6:05 am
US/LATAM 22 Apr | 4:05 pm
Market Intelligence: $TSLA

Analysis: Tesla price drivers and scenarios

Auto Gross Margin
17-19%
Target floor, excl. credits
Megapack Growth
+25% YoY
Projected energy deployment
Analyst range
US$0.32-0.48
EPS estimate range
AVG
LOW US$0.32 AVG US$0.41 HIGH US$0.48

The US$0.16 analyst range shows there is still a lot of uncertainty. The main question is how weaker vehicle deliveries compare with stronger, higher-margin energy storage contributions. A result above US$0.48 would suggest the autonomy and battery story is improving faster than the bear case expects.

Key factors that could move the result

Automotive gross margin
This is the most important number for Tesla’s core business. Markets want to see whether price cuts have started to settle, or whether margins are still under pressure.
Benchmark: 17% (excluding credits)
Energy storage (Megapacks)
This is the more durable growth story. Strong Megapack deployment and battery margins could help offset weaker vehicle deliveries
Focus: Storage growth versus pressure in the auto business
Full Self-Driving (FSD) & Robotaxi
This is the main narrative driver. Markets will watch for updates on FSD adoption and the robotaxi timeline to judge whether the move towards “physical AI” is becoming more credible.
Watch: Timing for next-generation autonomy technology
Regulatory credits
This is a quality check on the result. If EPS is boosted too much by credit sales, some traders may see the beat as less durable.
Watch: How much credit sales contribute to final EPS
Trade Execution: $TSLA

Earnings reaction framework: Q1 2026

Bull case
EPS above US$0.45, energy margins at 20%+ | FSD take rates rising
The result clears the top-tier analyst range. Commentary focuses on FSD scaling and Megapack production ramps rather than vehicle discounting. FY26 guidance is reaffirmed.
Possible reaction: stronger momentum, with short covering adding support
Base case
EPS between US$0.38 and US$0.43, auto margins stable | Near target
The result is close to expectations, but there is no major surprise from the energy business. The market stays focused on the robotaxi timeline. The initial move may be limited if the product mix looks unchanged.
Possible reaction: range-bound trading or a muted early response
Bear case
EPS below US$0.35, auto margins drop below 16% | Signs of FSD delays
The result misses even cautious expectations. Rising inventory suggests more discounting may be needed. The market starts to question whether the level of spending on AI and autonomy is too high.
Possible reaction: rotation out of the stock, especially if growth confidence weakens
Sentiment Analysis · Tesla Inc.

Interactive scenario analysis: $TSLA

Select earnings outcome
Growth momentum

Strong result, helped by energy and FSD

FSD and Energy do better than expected, which helps offset weaker car deliveries. Management gives the market more confidence that autonomy is getting closer to real revenue. Auto margins staying above 17% would also help.
EPS Outcome
Above US$0.45
Energy Signal
On track
Margins
At or above 17%
Possible reaction
Strong rally

Sources & Data Methodology Sources: Reporting dates and release times are from company investor relations calendars where marked Confirmed; otherwise they are GO Markets estimates. Consensus EPS, revenue and analyst-range data are sourced from Bloomberg and Earnings Whispers, as at 14 April 2026 (AEDT). Company guidance, backlog and operating metrics are sourced from the latest company filings, results presentations or investor relations materials unless stated otherwise. Any scenario analysis reflects GO Markets analysis. Figures and schedules may change without notice.

Expanded Coverage

AI isn’t the only trade this earnings season.

From data centres to defence, see why JPMorgan and the big defence players are on our radar for March.

From autonomy to electricity

If Tesla is the market’s test of whether physical AI can become a business, NextEra is a test of whether the power buildout behind AI is starting to show up more clearly in utility economics.

That is what makes the shift from Tesla to NextEra interesting: one is about ambition and platform narrative and the other is about power, contracts, infrastructure and return on capital.

$NEE | Q1 2026 REPORTING PERIOD

NextEra Energy, Inc.

NYSE | Utilities | 23 Apr 2026
Confirmed

Global Release Countdown (BMO)

00:00:00:00
reported EPS
US$1.09
reported Revenue
US$6.7bn
AU/ASIA 23 Apr | 9:35 pm
US/LATAM 23 Apr | 7:35 am
Market Intelligence: $NEE

Analysis: NEE price drivers and scenarios

Backlog
About 29.8 GW
Total Energy Resources backlog
Growth target
8%+ a year
Adjusted EPS growth through 2032
Analyst range
US$0.88-1.06
Q1 EPS estimate range
AVG
LOW US$0.88 AVG US$0.92 HIGH US$1.06

The main question is simple: can NextEra turn big growth plans into real progress? Traders want to see whether rising power demand, especially from AI, is starting to show up in results, contracts and project execution.

Trade Execution: $NEE

Key signals to watch

Contract conversion
One of the biggest proof points. Markets want to see whether strong customer interest is turning into signed agreements and clearer revenue visibility.
Signal: More large-load agreements signed
Natural gas and power buildout
Traders will watch for clearer milestones on the approved gas buildout and capacity plan to meet rising power demand.
Focus: Buildout timeline and project execution
Funding and capital discipline
Investors will want to know whether funding plans look manageable after the recent equity raise and the impact of financing costs.
Watch: Funding risk and capital pressure
Rate base and earnings outlook
Markets look for healthy rate-base growth and signs that rising demand can support long-term earnings growth.
Focus: Guidance, rate-base growth and EPS visibility
Sentiment Analysis · NextEra Energy

Interactive scenario analysis: $NEE

Select earnings outcome
Upside momentum

Strong result, backed by real progress

EPS comes in above US$1.06. Management shows better contract progress and clearer steps on new power projects. That would suggest the backlog is moving closer to real revenue.
EPS Outcome
Above US$1.06
Infrastructure Signal
More contracts signed
Possible reaction
Sentiment improves
Sources & Data Methodology

Sources: Reporting dates and release times are from company investor relations calendars where marked Confirmed; otherwise they are GO Markets estimates. Consensus EPS, revenue and analyst-range data are sourced from Bloomberg and Earnings Whispers, as at 14 April 2026 (AEDT). Company guidance, backlog and operating metrics are sourced from the latest company filings or results presentations. Any scenario analysis reflects GO Markets analysis. Figures and schedules may change without notice.

From power to oil

If NextEra reflects the electricity side of the real economy story, Exxon Mobil reflects the fuel side. That matters in a market where supply risk can still reset inflation expectations, shift sector leadership and change how traders think about defensiveness.

$XOM | Q1 2026 REPORTING PERIOD

Exxon Mobil Corporation

NYSE | Energy | 1 May 2026
Confirmed

Global Release Countdown (BMO)

00:00:00:00
Consensus EPS
US$1.66
Consensus Revenue
US$82.47bn
AU/ASIA 1 May | 8:30 pm
US/LATAM 1 May | 6:30 am
Market Intelligence: $XOM

Analysis: XOM price drivers and scenarios

Liquids pricing effect
US$1.9-2.3bn
Support from stronger oil prices
Energy products timing
-US$3.3-4.1bn
Downstream timing drag
Analyst range
US$1.60-$1.85
Q1 EPS estimate range
AVG
LOW US$1.60 AVG US$1.66 HIGH US$1.85

The key question for Exxon Mobil is straightforward: can stronger oil and gas pricing offset weaker volumes and downstream pressure? For traders, this is a test of earnings quality, if prices do the lifting, the market may still want proof that operations are holding up.

Trade Execution: $XOM

Key signals to watch

Realised pricing
Markets want to see whether stronger oil and gas prices were enough to offset weaker production volumes.
Signal: Price strength vs Volume pressure
Timing and quality
Commentary on whether the downstream timing drag is temporary or a sign of deeper margin pressure.
Focus: Accounting effect vs Headwind
Guyana and Upstream
Markets want steady production growth from Guyana to keep the long-term story intact.
Watch: Delivery and Resilience
Refining margins
Even if crude helps, weaker refining or chemicals performance could limit the overall upside.
Focus: Downstream offset levels
Sentiment Analysis · Exxon Mobil

Interactive scenario analysis: $XOM

Select earnings outcome
Pricing offsets disruption

Strong result, with pricing support doing enough

EPS above US$1.85. Higher realised pricing more than offsets weaker volumes, and management suggests timing drag was less severe than expected. Upstream updates stay constructive.
EPS Outcome
Above US$1.85
Timing Impact
Smaller than feared
Possible reaction
Sentiment improves
Sources & Data Methodology

Sources: Reporting dates from company investor relations calendars; otherwise they are GO Markets estimates. Consensus EPS, revenue and analyst-range data from Bloomberg and Earnings Whispers as at 14 April 2026 (AEDT). Any scenario analysis reflects GO Markets analysis. Figures and schedules may change without notice.

The Bottom Line

The 2026 Reality Check

This late-April energy cluster is about more than three company reports. It is a live test of what the market wants to pay for in 2026.

Tesla ($TSLA)

Autonomy and energy shifting from promise to proof.

NextEra ($NEE)

Electricity demand turning into practical utility growth.

Exxon ($XOM)

Oil strength translating into durable earnings power.

Taken together, they offer a useful read on the part of the market that looks more physical, more capital-intensive and, for many traders, more real.

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GO Markets
April 15, 2026

Disclaimer

References to companies, IPO candidates, valuations, exchanges, sectors and markets are illustrative only, based on publicly available information at the time of publication, and may change without notice. A proposed listing may be delayed, amended or cancelled, and inclusion on this page does not imply that a company will list, or that any share or CFD will be available to trade through GO Markets.