Dear readers,
Yesterday we asked whether the numbers would confirm the thesis or complicate it. The answer, delivered in a torrent of earnings releases and central bank decisions over the past 24 hours, is: both. Amazon’s first quarter demolished expectations, the Fed held rates steady amid its deepest internal rift in three decades, and the ECB openly discussed raising rates for the first time in this cycle. The American consumer is still spending. The question is whether anyone else can keep up.
Amazon: The E-Commerce Floor Holds
Amazon reported first-quarter 2026 net revenue of $181.5 billion, up 17% year over year and $4.2 billion above the consensus estimate of $177.3 billion. Operating income reached $23.9 billion. Net income came in at $30.3 billion — or $2.78 per share — though that figure was flattered by a $16.8 billion pretax gain on the company’s Anthropic stake.
Strip out the investment windfall and the story is still compelling. North American revenue grew 12% to $104.1 billion on rising unit volumes, faster delivery times, and improved logistics efficiency. Advertising revenue climbed 22% to $17.2 billion. This is not a company coasting on cloud margins. The retail engine is pulling its weight.
AWS, meanwhile, posted its fastest growth in 15 quarters: revenue up 28% to $37.6 billion, generating $14.2 billion in operating profit. That is real cash flow underwriting real infrastructure spending — a distinction the market is increasingly willing to reward. Goldman Sachs upgraded Amazon to “Buy” and raised its price target from $275 to $325. BofA moved to $310, Pivotal Research to $320, and Benchmark to $370.
The macro data reinforced the consumer picture. U.S. personal income rose 0.6% in March, double the 0.3% consensus, and personal consumption expenditures jumped 0.9%. Retail sales have now increased for six consecutive months.
The Cloud Monetization Race Widens
Amazon was not alone. Alphabet reported total revenue of $109.9 billion, up 22%, with earnings per share of $5.11 — nearly double the $2.63 consensus. Google Cloud surged 63% to $20.02 billion and disclosed a backlog of $460 billion. Microsoft’s Azure grew 39%, with its AI business now running at an annualized $37 billion, up 123%.
These results sharpen the contrast we flagged yesterday with Meta Platforms. Meta’s stock dropped as much as 9% in premarket trading after the company raised its 2026 capital expenditure guidance to $125–$145 billion and reported a $4.03 billion loss in Reality Labs. Yesterday we described Meta’s ad machine as the most convincing proof that massive AI spending can coexist with massive revenue growth. The updated capex range — up from the $115–$135 billion disclosed just hours earlier — tested that conviction fast. Amazon and Alphabet are converting infrastructure investment into visible, recurring cloud revenue. Meta is asking shareholders to fund a hardware vision whose payoff remains further out.
The Fed’s Deepest Split Since 1992
The Federal Reserve held rates at 3.50–3.75% on Wednesday — its third consecutive pause this year — but the vote revealed fractures. The decision passed 8-to-4, the highest number of dissents since 1992. The PCE price index rose to 3.5% year over year in March, with core PCE at 3.2%. Jerome Powell confirmed he will remain on the Board of Governors after his chairmanship ends on May 15. His nominated successor, Kevin Warsh, inherits a central bank caught between persistent inflation and a White House demanding rate cuts.
The ECB Inches Toward Tightening
In Frankfurt, the European Central Bank held its deposit rate at 2.0% on Thursday, but the accompanying language carried a different charge. President Christine Lagarde said the Governing Council had “discussed the possibility of a rate increase at length,” prompted by eurozone inflation climbing to 3.0% in April. Growth offers no counterargument: the eurozone expanded just 0.1% in the first quarter. Germany managed 0.3%. France posted zero. A central bank debating tightening into stagnation is a development equity and bond markets have not yet priced.
Oil, Crypto, and the Geopolitical Drag
Brent crude has been trading between $110 and $125 per barrel, touching a four-year high as the U.S.-Israel-Iran standoff continues to pressure energy markets and feed stagflation fears globally. In Europe, CDU foreign policy spokesman Johann Wadephul responded to President Trump’s threat to withdraw U.S. troops from Germany with measured calm: “We are prepared for that,” he said, adding that he expects decisions to be made in close coordination within NATO.
Bitcoin fell to approximately $75,500–$76,100 as the Fed’s hawkish hold weighed on risk assets. The seven-day average of realized losses hit $2.3 billion — a capitulation-level print — and institutional investors pulled money from U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs for three straight sessions, including $138 million on Wednesday alone.
The Takeaway
Two narratives are running in parallel. In the United States, the consumer is spending, cloud revenue is accelerating, and companies like Amazon are generating enough cash to fund enormous AI bets without asking shareholders to take them on faith. In Europe, growth is barely positive, inflation is rising, and the ECB is openly weighing a policy reversal that would widen the transatlantic rate gap further. The market rewarded Amazon and Alphabet for showing receipts. It punished Meta for showing ambition without them. That distinction — cash flow today versus promises of cash flow tomorrow — is becoming the single most important filter in this earnings season.
Best regards,
The StocksToday.com Editorial









