Nasdaq faces its biggest AI capex test yet

The Nasdaq 100 is sitting at a fresh record going into the most concentrated 48-hour earnings window of the cycle — and the question traders cannot yet answer is whether the AI infrastructure trade can survive its own success. Four hyperscalers report on Wednesday. Street estimates based on company guidance now put their combined 2026 capital expenditure at roughly $635–665 billion, up from about $381 billion in 2025. Free cash flow at several of them is projected to compress sharply as a result.
That is the contradiction the index is being asked to price in real time. The rally has been built on the assumption that AI revenue will eventually justify the spend. The verdict starts arriving in 48 hours.
What the index is pricing in
The Nasdaq 100 closed at 27,305.68 on Monday. The Nasdaq Composite finished at a record 24,887.10. The S&P 500 closed at a record 7,173.91. The Dow slipped 0.13%.
Beneath those flat headline moves is positioning that is anything but flat. Alphabet, Amazon, Meta and Microsoft are each up more than 10% this month going into earnings. Apple has gained more than 6%. Five of the Magnificent Seven account for roughly a quarter of S&P 500 market capitalisation, which means any guidance shift travels straight into the broader index, not just the tech wrapper.
Why the capex number matters more than the headline beat
Hyperscaler capex guidance has become the single most-watched line item of this cycle. Amazon has guided to roughly $200 billion in 2026 capex. Alphabet has guided to $175–185 billion. Meta has guided to $115–135 billion. Microsoft is tracking towards roughly $140–$150 billion in fiscal 2026.
The cash flow consequences are the part that is starting to attract attention. Barclays analysts see Meta's free cash flow falling by close to 90% in 2026. Morgan Stanley analysts project Amazon's free cash flow turning negative by around the high‑teens billions, while Bank of America analysts model a deeper deficit closer to the high‑20s billions. Alphabet held a $25 billion bond sale in November, adding to its long-term debt over 2025.
The implication for traders is that earnings beats alone may not move the index this week. What moves the index is whether management commentary signals a willingness to pause, slow, or extend the spend cycle — and whether they can point to monetisation evidence that justifies continuing it.
How this week could reshape the trade
Microsoft, Alphabet, Meta and Amazon all report over a concentrated mid‑week window, with Apple following shortly after. The Fed delivers its policy decision in the same mid‑week window. Traders are pricing close to a 100% probability that the federal funds target stays at 3.50–3.75%, with attention on how Jerome Powell characterises inflation risks, including the impact of higher energy prices.
That stacks four hyperscaler reports, a Fed decision and a Powell appearance into a single trading session. Implied volatility on individual mega-cap names tends to be elevated into earnings, but the index-level volatility setup is what matters for Nasdaq 100 traders. With four names that combined represent a meaningful share of the index reporting after the close, overnight gap risk into Thursday's open is structurally larger than a typical earnings night.
The cleanest read for the index will come from cloud growth and capex commentary. Some strategists suggest cloud revenue growth at Alphabet and Microsoft needs to either accelerate or hold its recent pace to justify the 2026 spend. Any signal that AI workload demand is failing to absorb new capacity — or that hyperscalers themselves are growing more cautious on the build-out — could reset the multiple the market is willing to pay.
What the index has to defend
Technically, the Nasdaq 100 is trading above its 200-day moving average and well above its early-April lows. That gives the index a cushion, but it also means a disappointing earnings response has more room to mean-revert before finding meaningful support. The October 2025 highs sit just below current levels and are likely to act as a near-term reference for traders watching for follow-through after Wednesday's reports.
Sector breadth is the second variable to watch. Much of the April rally has been concentrated in the same hyperscaler complex that reports this week. If results trigger rotation rather than a broad rally, the index can hold up while internal leadership shifts — a dynamic some strategists describe as a typical late-cycle handover rather than a top.
What traders are watching next
Wednesday's reports and the Fed decision are the immediate catalysts. Apple's results on Thursday close out the Mag 7 cycle. Beyond that, traders are watching for whether any of the four hyperscalers revises its full-year capex range — up or down — and whether monetisation commentary supports the spend curve through 2027. Until those answers arrive, the Nasdaq 100 is trading at record levels on a thesis that is about to be tested in real time.
The performance figures quoted refer to the past, and past performance is not a guarantee of future performance or a reliable guide to future performance.