The market is experiencing a structural rotation from software into semiconductors and AI infrastructure, with the CPU thesis finally breaking through. GPT-5.5's launch confirms the frontier model race remains competitive, but the real alpha is in the physical layer—power, cooling, and compute supply chains—where demand is demonstrably exceeding supply. Meanwhile, SaaS stocks are getting crushed, software-to-semiconductor relative performance hit a new all-time low.
Implication: This is not a cyclical rotation; it's a repricing of where value accretes in the AI stack. Physical infrastructure (power, cooling, foundry capacity) is where the scarce resources are. Software is being commoditized faster than expected as AI agents reduce the value of human seats.
Nuance: The software bear case may be overstated—agents layering on top of seats rather than replacing them means the death of SaaS is overstated, but the multiple compression is real as the unit economics shift from per-seat to per-outcome.
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The data center buildout is hitting hard supply constraints across the board. Comfort Systems USA earnings provided the most concrete confirmation: 88% YoY electrical segment growth, 56% of revenue from advanced technology/data center work, and management explicitly stated demand exceeds supply—the constraint is execution capacity, not demand.
GPU useful lives are extending from 5 to 7-8 years, renewal prices are rising, margins are expanding in cloud clusters and memory. ASML is completely sold out. Even copper foil in PCBs is sold out. The supply chain is taut across every layer.
Implication: The bottleneck has shifted from chips to physical infrastructure. Companies like Flex (cooling IP with JetCool acquisition, Broadcom codesign deal) and power equipment suppliers are mispriced as commodity manufacturers when they should be valued as critical AI infrastructure platform companies. Vertiv, Eaton, and power contractors benefit structurally. The scarcity is in the physical layer, not the chip layer.
Nuance: ASML's monopoly on EUV is a different risk profile than general component shortages. If EUV capacity can't expand fast enough (Carl Zeiss expansion bottleneck), logic pricing stays elevated and foundries prioritize high-margin leading-edge over capacity expansion.
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The CPU demand thesis is being validated by multiple channels. Lenovo's data center head explicitly confirmed AI data centers are straining high-end server CPU supply even as Intel prioritizes production for those components. Intel IR disclosed an unexpected margin lift from better yield salvage—chips that would have been scrap were binned down and still sold into usable SKUs. Lip-Bu Tan is crediting his first-year restructuring for "continued and steady progress."
Meta and Amazon reportedly signed multi-billion dollar agreements to use Intel CPUs for AI development.
Implication: Intel Foundry Services thesis is gaining credibility. If they achieve parity (not superiority) with TSMC, they become the fallback foundry for CPU production given capacity scarcity. The market was late to this call—analysts are now expecting the highest earnings growth in decades, and institutional investors were "asleep at the wheel." PRIMECAP's high-conviction hold stands out.
Nuance: AMD using Intel Foundry for CPU production is a real scenario given capacity scarcity—the two companies have been competitors, but capacity trumps rivalry. Craig Barrett and Andy Grove were the Intel CEOs last time the stock hit an all-time high. Intel still needs to prove execution on leading-edge nodes before the foundry story is fully credible.
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GPT-5.5 ("Spud") has launched with significant performance improvements, confirmed by multiple users experiencing substantial jumps in long-running tasks, coding, and agentic work. OpenAI's chief scientist stated capability improvements will "keep increasing" with "significant improvements" short-term and "extremely significant improvements" medium-term. The model achieved top scores on CursorBench.
DeepSeek V4 (1.6T parameters, Pro and Flash versions) launched with 1M-token context windows at dramatically lower cost than competitors—Flash at ~$0.007/task versus Claude Opus at significantly higher per-task costs. FundaAI benchmarks show DeepSeek V4 Pro achieved the highest completed-task multi-step score (8.90), though with partial coverage on hard coding tasks. DeepSeek V4 Pro received the only perfect 10/10 on financial research due to superior game theory analysis on an NVDA task.
Claude Opus 4.6 and 4.7 remain competitive leaders in writing, citation rigor, and hard reasoning.
Implication: The frontier is now a three-way race between Anthropic (writing, earnings), DeepSeek (analytical depth, cost efficiency), and OpenAI (speed, agentic tasks). Open-source models lag 3-6 months but at 50-90% lower cost. This compression in the model tier is deflationary for premium token pricing—generic API calls will get cheaper while workflow, routing, and optimization layer capture value.
Nuance: DeepSeek's multimodal capabilities are "future work," and local deployment creates integration friction that enterprises may not want to manage. The benchmark comparisons have methodological inconsistencies. Premium tier models retain value for regulated workflows (banking, legal, healthcare) where Mythos-class access is now a competitive moat.
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Software vs. semis relative performance hit a new all-time low. BofA's Twilio note was called "garbage" by at least one observer. Small software companies are being undercut as AI agents reduce per-seat value—companies like Notion face the scenario where doubling spend for MCP access isn't worth it when workflows can be rebuilt on local files.
Databricks GTM is crushing (58% of team meeting/exceeding quota versus early 2022 when they had 1/3 the quotas). Snowflake, Okta, and ServiceNow show positive GTM AI impact sentiment. Path and Sprout Social showing negative sentiment.
Implication: The range of outcomes for software companies is widening dramatically—those integrating AI well into revenue-generating workflows expand multiples; those selling administrative or headcount-replacing software face compression. The death of SaaS is overstated (agents layer on top, not replace seats), but the per-seat model is being disrupted toward per-outcome pricing. This is a fundamental business model shift, not a cyclical correction.
Nuance: Elite software names still have pricing power with enterprise customers willing to pay for reliable, integrated workflows. The SaaS rollback from Iconiq, Eminence closure, and other large holder selldowns may actually improve the technical setup for remaining holders. Short interest in software against a semi rally is crowded and could see squeeze dynamics.
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The AI infrastructure buildout is becoming a multi-year electric load cycle rather than a short construction cycle. The bottleneck is shifting from chips to power delivery—rubber meeting the road on grid capacity. Texas, PJM, Mid-Atlantic, and Carolinas are the geographic epicenters. Data center load growth is structurally undersupplied across these regions.
Comfort Systems' electrical segment growth of 88% is a direct read-through to switchgear, busway, power distribution, and substations. Eaton, Vertiv, and power infrastructure contractors (Quanta, MasTec, MYR) should benefit. Vertiv and Modine remain critical for thermal management as TDPs hit 3,000W+ per socket and liquid cooling becomes mandatory.
Implication: The 800V HVDC transition is rebuilding the entire power delivery layer of AI factories. Flex is the only public vehicle with both cooling IP (JetCool microconvective technology, 3x lower thermal resistance, 3,000W+ TDP per socket versus 1,500W typical) and power delivery integration—codesigned with both Nvidia and Broadcom. The market is pricing them as a contract manufacturer when they're actually a thermal and power platform company.
Nuance: Physical buildout constraints (labor scarcity, utility interconnection timelines, permitting) cap the speed of data center capacity additions even if demand is insatiable. Hyperscaler free cash flow will be pressured by construction cost inflation. This is a multi-year capacity constraint, not a demand problem.
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Iran conflict dynamics are reshaping energy markets—the Middle East situation is being managed to protect US markets while strategically pressuring adversaries. Oil macro experts missed the first principles question: what's the economic value of regime change to Saudi Arabia and UAE, and how can Trump leverage that as part of a broader China containment strategy?
Defense spending implications: The Iran war burned through precision munitions (L-RASM, JASSM-ER, Tomahawk) designed for Pacific scenarios, creating a six-year pipeline to refill. Pentagon insiders are reportedly questioning whether the US can win a Taiwan conflict given current stockpile levels.
Implication: AI compute is now a matter of national security. US policy will protect domestic compute capacity and AI infrastructure investment even if it means protecting hyperscaler valuations. The regulatory capture narrative (regulation entrenching big players) continues—Google's Anthropic investment ($40B more, $10B at $350B valuation) is both a strategic bet and a moat-building mechanism.
Nuance: The "regulatory capture protects incumbents" narrative has teeth—it's harder for competitors to challenge when the largest companies are intertwined with the state. But it also creates political risk if government priorities shift or if concentration becomes a campaign issue.
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AI Infrastructure as National Security: The compute war and the semiconductor supply chain are now explicitly tied to geopolitical strategy. DeepSeek's development of alternative compute ecosystems (Huawei Ascend support) and the US's EUV export controls are all part of the same story. The US is treating AI capability as a hegemonic interest—everything is on the table.
Value Migration in the AI Stack: Value is moving from model layers to physical infrastructure to workflow software. Software is getting commoditized faster than expected (per-seat → per-outcome), while physical infrastructure (power, cooling, foundry capacity) and premium tier AI access are scarce. The "seat becomes a negligible percentage of total spend" scenario is playing out faster than modeled.
Semiconductor Cycle Durability: The "cycle debate" may be over—the structural demand for AI compute, power, and cooling infrastructure is multi-year. The bull case is that this isn't a cyclical upgrade cycle but a secular buildout of AI factory capacity that changes the load profile of electricity grids permanently. Skeptics argue that if hyperscaler ROI on compute doesn't materialize, this could be a bubble—but current capacity constraints suggest otherwise.
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• China reopening/AI policy signals: Market is focused on US domestic buildout; China AI development and the DeepSeek competitive threat seems priced as a given rather than a dynamic risk.
• Crypto/blockchain sector chatter: Despite AAVE looking "healthy again" and broader market optimism, crypto hasn't captured the narrative attention it typically does in risk-on environments.
• Credit market stress: No chatter about credit spreads, high-yield dynamics, or corporate debt maturities—typically a concern in late-cycle environments. Market is either confident in soft landing or ignoring the signal.
• Short sellers on semiconductors: Despite record positioning in semis, no visible short squeeze pain trades being discussed. Either shorts have covered or they're being quiet about losses.
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Consensus: AI infrastructure buildout continues, CPU demand is real, semis are a generational opportunity, GPT-5.5 is a significant step forward, DeepSeek is competitive but still behind frontier on multimodality.
Contrarian: Oil macro traders who were positioned for supply disruptions were burned by Trump's jawboning—first Iran war oil bulls, then earlier treasury bears. The lesson: panicans get fired before policy reversals create smoother outcomes. Oil at $60 would be good for equities, but scenario analysis suggests short oil/long equities is a cleaner trade.
Crowded: Long semis, short SaaS, long AI infrastructure names. The technical setup for software may actually improve as large page-1 holders sell (Iconiq, Eminence) and short interest in semis reaches record levels. "Every day is national semi day" suggests momentum is extended but not necessarily overbought.
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Near-term (1-2 weeks): - Mag 7 earnings next week (MSFT, GOOGL, META, AMZN, AAPL) - FOMC meeting: Rate path implications for risk appetite - GPT-5.5 API results: Full benchmark performance still pending official API release - DeepSeek V4 API integration testing: Inference cost curves and hardware abstraction competitive dynamics - Q1 earnings season: Software GTM read-throughs vs. semiconductor beat rates
Medium-term (1-3 months): - AI infrastructure capex tracking: Comfort Systems backlog conversion as physical buildout indicator - Intel Foundry Services announcements: Any new customer wins, capacity expansion timeline - GPU supply chain: When do shortages ease? H100/H200 availability. - AI model pricing: Open-source compression on premium tier API pricing - Datacenter construction permits and utility interconnection queue data
Tail Risks: - Hyperscaler ROI disappointment: If AI infrastructure capex doesn't translate to revenue growth, the buildout could stall - Geopolitical supply shock: Taiwan conflict would collapse AI infrastructure buildout - AI regulation: EU AI Act enforcement, US regulatory framework, data sovereignty rules could fragment the market - Software zombie apocalypse: If per-seat SaaS model collapses faster than expected, multiple compression spreads to adjacencies - Energy crisis: Data center power demand creates grid stress, especially in ERCOT and PJM
—————— 📅 Published: 2026-04-26 07:00 HKT ⏰ Next update: 19:00 HKT
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No macro headline is dominating the tape this morning; it’s a stock-specific session led by semis. **INTC** is +25% to ~$83 after a 13-broker upgrade cycle, **MXL** +30% AH on data center optical inflection, **TXN** +23% this week confirming analog has turned, while **SAP** is bouncing maybe +5% off
Factual bullet layer:
What the market is reacting to: It’s not the beat. It’s the structural narrative that agentic AI is compressing the CPU:GPU ratio from 1:8 in pre-training to as tight as 1:2 in agentic workloads (per Intel’s own CEO and Northland). Intel is effectively the only scaled x86 server CPU source, and supply is constrained into 2027. The stock is ripping on forced re-rating after being left for dead.
The Bull Case: The bull stack is deep and numbers-heavy. HSBC (Buy, $100) models 2026/2027 server CPU shipments +20%/+21% YoY, with DCAI revenue of $23.2B/$29.4B — 17% and 31% above consensus ($19.9B/$22.4B). HSBC’s GM estimates of 41.3%/45.0% are also well above street (37.2%/41.3%), arguing the market underestimates ASP upside and foundry reallocation flexibility. KeyBanc ($110) highlights the 500bps GM expansion to 41% driven by price increases and 18A yield recovery, with advanced packaging backlog building into a multi-year 2027 ramp. Benchmark ($105, Buy) flags output improving faster across Intel 7/10, Intel 3/4, and 18A, with advanced packaging now a billions-dollar opportunity. Evercore ISI upgraded to Outperform with a $111 target, calling it a "CPU renaissance" driven by inference and agentic AI. Citi ($95, Buy) also upgraded. Roth/MKM ($100, Buy) credits CEO Lip-Bu Tan with improved execution and sees multi-year agreement interest from large customers. Northland ($92) notes the CPU:GPU ratio shift and a potential 14A foundry customer decision in 2H26 as a catalyst.
The Bear Case: The valuation pushback is violent. Rosenblatt maintains Sell with a $50 target, arguing even after raising FY27 EPS to $1.25 and using a 40x multiple, the stock at $83 is "far ahead of the fundamentals". RBC ($80, Sector Perform) calls the setup balanced at >50x CY27 EPS and warns PC faces memory shortages and pull-forward risks. Needham (Hold) says the turnaround is underway but "shares fully reflect the company's prospects". Cantor Fitzgerald ($90, Neutral) argues traditional valuation metrics are challenged and Intel’s value depends on being a fast or slow follower to TSMC; the bull case requires TSMC to slow capacity additions. TD Cowen ($75, Hold) and Stifel ($75, Hold) both cite valuation as keeping them on the sidelines, with Q2 GM headwinds from Panther Lake mix.
What resolves the debate: 14A foundry customer commitments in 2H26 and sustained server CPU ASPs through AMD’s next-gen ramp. If Intel lands a marquee foundry customer and Q3 guide shows GM re-expansion, the $110 targets are in play. If 18A yields stall and PC weakens in 2H, the $50 bear case closes fast.
Factual bullet layer:
What the market is reacting to: A relief rally that SAP didn’t blow up guidance. The stock entered the print -41% over six months and near 52-week lows ($160.66), pricing in a massive reset. The cCBO held 25%. But the 5-broker cluster is cutting PTs anyway because the Middle East conflict introduces growth uncertainty that is impossible to model, and the organic guide down implies the headline maintenance was cosmetic.
The Bull Case: Morgan Stanley (Overweight, EUR190) says "no major reset of SAP's outlook is the key takeaway and a positive for investors" (Article 17). cCBO better than feared, cloud revenue strong, and margin expansion on track. With a PEG of 0.19 and Piotroski Score of 9, the selloff is overdone. Evercore ISI (In Line, EUR200) notes cCBO at 25% cc exceeded the ~24% bogey and FY26 outlook reiterated. KeyBanc (Overweight, EUR235, cut from 280) called the quarter "better than feared despite imperfect performance" with strength in cloud contract billings and Cloud ERP. Citizens/JMP (Market Perform) highlighted the clean EPS and op profit beats. The mid-May analyst meeting on AI monetization is a near-term catalyst.
The Bear Case: BMO Capital (Outperform, $200, cut from $210) says sustained Middle East conflict "increases growth uncertainty for SAP" and could impact SAP "more than other companies in BMO Capital's coverage universe" (Article 29). They note 2026 revenue guide was guided modestly lower when accounting for M&A, implying organic deceleration. KeyBanc's own PT cut to EUR235 reflects mixed guidance and supply chain booking fears. The market is asking: if cloud backlog is so strong, why reduce organic revenue growth guidance? The answer is likely M&A mix and geopolitical prudence, but it gives bears fodder. Macquarie’s cut on NOW (to $109) frames the broader software worry: macro and geopolitical uncertainty and weak US federal procurement are sector-wide drags.
What resolves the debate: The mid-May analyst meeting and specific quantification of Middle East revenue exposure. If SAP can isolate the geopolitical risk and show AI monetization accelerating, the stock re-rates toward EUR200+. If Middle East sovereign deals freeze, the organic guide risks another cut.
TXN reported what BofA (Buy, $320) called a broader and higher-quality recovery than last year’s false start. Industrial revenue grew +30% YoY and +20% QoQ, with every industrial subsector growing both sequentially and annually. Industrial remains 15% below the 2022 peak, suggesting a multi-quarter runway. Management sees no evidence of pull-in and wants to let Q2 play out before calling the upturn durable — a prudent stance given TXN’s direct model and short lead times mean the company sees demand in real time. 2026 capex is guided at $11.4B, declining to $7.5-8B by 2028.
STM delivered its largest earnings beat in nearly three years per UBS (Buy, EUR49). Q1 revenue was $3.1B vs. $3.04B consensus, with Q2 guided to $3.45B vs. $3.2B street. The guide implies a 12% sequential increase, led by automotive up low-double-digits and industrial up mid-20%. GM guided to 35.2% (+110bps) as utilization ramps from 70% to 80%. The AI data center business is expected to grow >50% YoY to >$500M, and the low Earth orbit satellite franchise is projected to drive ~$3B cumulative revenue from 2026-2028 (per Mizuho, Outperform, $56).
NXPI is the laggard. Stifel (Hold, $250) expects a slight Q1 beat and the ability to raise Q2 estimates, but with 56% automotive exposure, the firm remains cautious. The TXN print validates analog recovery, but NXPI needs auto production to cooperate.
The mechanism here is inventory digestion completeness. TXN’s direct model + short lead times = no phantom demand. STM’s utilization ramp from 70% to 80% with above-seasonal revenue guide proves foundries are refilling, not restocking. The debate is whether this is durable or a Q1 snapback. Bulls note TXN industrial at 15% below peak with broad-based growth = runway into 2027. Bears note STM missed EPS ($0.13 vs. $0.17) despite revenue beat, implying pricing and mix remain soft. The forward read is simple: if TXN guides Q2 above seasonal and STM pushes utilization to 85% in 2H, the analog cycle is real and read-throughs to ON Semi and Microchip are bullish.
DLR started 2026 with a record quarter. The company signed its largest lease ever — a 200MW deployment in Charlotte for AI inference — and raised 2026 guidance for revenue, adjusted EBITDA, and CFFO/share. The development pipeline expanded from $10B to ~$16.5B, with >60% pre-leased and 1.2GW under construction. Backlog hit $1.0B. Bernstein SocGen (Outperform, $232) notes the land bank increased by 1GW in Q1 alone. Stifel (Buy, $235) sees the updated guidance implying ~9-10% revenue growth and ~11% EBITDA growth with 60bps margin expansion. TD Cowen (Hold, $192) acknowledges the momentum but argues it is priced in after a 30% YTD rally to ~$206.
VRT delivered a Q1 beat and raised 2026 EPS guidance despite closing down ~2% on the day. Americas organic growth was +44% (vs. BNP Paribas Exane estimate of +35%), with margins expanding >500bps to 27%. EMEA fell ~29% on timing, but management raised the region’s full-year guide to flat YoY, implying a strong 2H ramp as industry capacity issues subside. Orders are expected up YoY.
The mechanism: The AI capex debate has shifted from "will hyperscalers spend?" to "can the physical layer keep up?" DLR’s 60% pre-leased pipeline de-risks the buildout — this is not a Field of Dreams exercise. VRT’s Americas margin expansion proves pricing power in power/thermal. The bull case is that 2026 is the year AI infrastructure moves from speculative pre-leasing to contracted revenue. The bear case is valuation: DLR at 27x NTM AFFO and VRT at 292% over the past year leave no room for execution wobbles. The forward read is DLR’s land bank supports 2028 growth, while VRT’s EMEA rebound in 2H is the margin bogey.
BESI is entering a capacity buildout in advanced packaging that has no peer. Needham (Buy, EUR300, from EUR210) notes hybrid bonding is being adopted by all three HBM suppliers with a uniform transition from TCB to hybrid bonding around 2028, driven by SRAM stacking and co-packaged optics. BESI remains the only viable supplier for die-to-wafer hybrid bonding. The firm forecasts 47% revenue growth in FY2026 and calls the hybrid bonding revolution "just getting started." The stock has surged 165% over the past year.
MXL reported and guided above expectations, with Roth/MKM and Needham both upgrading to Buy with $60 targets. Q1 EPS was $0.22 vs. $0.18 consensus; revenue $137.2M vs. $134.6M. Infrastructure revenue has surpassed Broadband as the largest contributor, and the company is positioned for AI data center optical interconnect growth as XPU clusters scale. Needham’s target is based on 25x CY28 EPS of $2.35. The stock ripped ~30% AH and is up 255% over the past year.
CLS (reporting Apr 27) is the integration read-through. BMO (Outperform, $450) raised estimates ahead of the print, citing sustained hyperscaler capex and CLS’s market position in switching and Google TPU products.
The mechanism: As XPU clusters scale, the constraints move from transistors to bandwidth and packaging. BESI controls the only die-to-wafer hybrid bonding tool needed for HBM4 and 3D logic stacking. MXL is riding the same datacenter optical upgrade cycle. The bull case is a multi-year order ramp with no competition. The bear case is both stocks are priced for perfection: BESI is flagged as overvalued on Fair Value; MXL is up 255%. The forward read is BESI’s 2H26 order flow and MXL’s Q2 guidance trajectory.
AMD reports May 5, but DA Davidson upgraded to Buy with a $375 target, arguing Intel’s print indicates meaningful upside to AMD estimates. The firm raised 2026 estimates by +$2B revenue and +$1.5B gross profit, now materially above consensus. The core thesis: agentic AI shifts the GPU:CPU ratio from 8:1 in pre-training to near parity in agentic workloads (per Intel’s CEO). With Meta guiding 6GW of datacenter capacity and OpenAI raising $122B, AMD’s 35% CAGR trajectory is underpinned. The new target is 32x CY27 EPS.
GOOGL is executing on a full-stack vertical integration strategy. At Cloud Next, the company launched the Gemini Enterprise Agent Platform, next-gen TPUs, and disclosed processing 16 billion tokens per minute in Q1 — exceeding OpenAI’s recently disclosed 15 billion and up 60% sequentially (per BMO, Outperform, $410). Evercore ISI (Outperform, $400) views Street cloud revenue estimates of $18B (+47% YoY) as highly reasonable, with backlog up 55% sequentially to $240B. TD Cowen (Buy, $375) expects agentic workflows to steepen adoption curves across the enterprise stack.
The mechanism: The market is repricing CPU exposure higher as agentic AI requires more CPU orchestration, while simultaneously rewarding GOOGL’s vertical stack (TPU + agentic platform + distribution) as a moat against NVIDIA’s ecosystem. The bull case for AMD is supply/demand imbalance allowing price increases across the portfolio. The bull case for GOOGL is that 16B tokens/min proves AI consumption is accelerating, not plateauing. The bear case: AMD has to execute on May 5 and Intel’s narrative steal is real; GOOGL faces antitrust overhang (Brazil CADE expanded investigation) and token growth does not equal revenue if inference prices compress. The forward read: AMD’s May 5 print is the next bogey for the agentic thesis; GOOGL’s Q1 cloud backlog commentary is the check on whether token velocity converts to dollar retention.
| Date | Ticker | Event | What to Watch | |------|--------|-------|---------------| | Apr 27 | CDNS | Q1 earnings | Hardware contribution, Hexagon sim integration, backlog | | Apr 27 | CLS | Q1 earnings | Hyperscaler capex tracking, Google TPU/switching mix | | Apr 28 | NXPI | Q1 earnings | Auto vs. industrial mix, analog pricing | | Apr 29 | AMZN | Q1 earnings | AWS growth, Anthropic ROI, operating income margin | | Apr 30 | AAPL | Q1 earnings | iPhone 17 units, memory cost inflation impact | | May 4 | PLTR | Q1 earnings | Government vs. commercial AI revenue split | | May 5 | AMD | Q1 earnings | Data center CPU supply constraints, agentic AI commentary |
The non-obvious read today is that the 2026 earnings derisking is happening in the hard parts of AI — silicon, power, and real estate — while the soft parts remain trapped in a geopolitical discount. INTC’s $1B+ of unfulfilled CPU demand, BESI’s hybrid bonding monopoly, and DLR’s 60% pre-leased pipeline are all sending the same signal: the physical AI buildout is accelerating into a supply-constrained 2027. Meanwhile, SAP’s organic guide down and NOW’s cRPO deceleration show that enterprise software is where macro uncertainty and AI deflation are surfacing first. The market is effectively running a barbell: long contracted infrastructure, short discretionary software exposed to sovereign procurement. If Middle East tensions persist, that spread widens. If they abate, the software unwind could be violent — but the floor isn’t in yet.
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