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Q1 Earnings Season Is Winding Down. Here Are the 5 Stocks That Defined It.

Earnings season isn’t officially over yet. But with 95% of the S&P 500‘s (SNPINDEX: ^GSPC) companies’ first-quarter numbers now in hand — including all the major ones investors were most interested in — Q1 earnings season is effectively over.

Overall, it was a pretty good quarter. Data from FactSet indicates 84% of the S&P 500’s constituents were on pace to beat their earnings estimates, contributing to year-over-year Q1 profit growth of 27.7%. The broader investor takeaways from Q1’s earnings reports, however, can be illustrated by just five companies’ quarterly reports.

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1. Alphabet

Alphabet (NASDAQ: GOOG)(NASDAQ: GOOGL) continues to roll, reporting 19% year-over-year revenue growth (on a constant-currency basis) for the three months ended March. Its cloud computing arm, which offers artificial intelligence (AI) data center solutions, of course, outpaced all of the company’s other businesses.

There’s a curious detail quietly buried in the numbers, though. That’s the fact that Google’s advertising revenue grew by more than 15%, accelerating Q4’s year-over-year growth pace of just over 13%.

What it tells us: Rather than cutting back on promotional efforts in an economic environment that doesn’t look or feel all that strong, advertisers are actually getting more aggressive. This acceleration may be a sign that Google Ads offers the most bang for the buck, so to speak.

2. Meta Platforms

Meta Platforms(NASDAQ: META) Q1 revenue of $56.3 billion and adjusted per-share profits of $7.31 easily topped expectations of $55.5 billion and $6.78 per share (respectively). Nevertheless, shares tanked for several reasons following the late-April release of these results.

First, daily active user growth of only 4% (year over year) to 3.56 billion was its slowest user growth in years, so much so that the number actually fell from Q4’s figure of 3.58 billion… another multiyear first.

And second, although Meta didn’t spend as much on artificial intelligence infrastructure during the first quarter as expected, it did warn shareholders that its capital expenditures would likely be between $125 billion and $145 billion, up from previous guidance of between $115 billion and $135 billion.

What it tells us: The market’s response confirms that investors are still sensitive to aggressive AI investments without ironclad assurance that this spending will be worth it, at least by paying for itself.

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