Curious but Cautious: My Take on the Magnificent 7

Spiders
01-24

I don’t own any of the Magnificent 7 stocks. Not a single share. And yet, every earnings season, I can’t help but watch them closely.

Next week is no exception. Microsoft, Meta Platforms, and Tesla are set to report after the close on January 28, followed by Apple on the 29th. Headlines are already buzzing. Analysts are predicting Apple to post $2.65 EPS on $137.5 billion in revenue, Microsoft $3.88 EPS on $80.2 billion, and Meta faces extra scrutiny after its last post-earnings selloff.

Apple (AAPL)

Tesla Motors (TSLA)

Meta Platforms, Inc. (META)

Microsoft (MSFT)

Over the past few years, I’ve noticed a pattern with tech-related stocks: even when they dip, the pullbacks usually feel temporary. Hype seems to have a way of creeping back in, driving prices higher. It’s almost hypnotic—the market dips, fear rises, then excitement returns, pulling valuations back up. There’s a rhythm to it, a cycle that repeats itself with remarkable consistency.

So, as the Magnificent 7 earnings loom, my gut says: the overall trend is still likely bullish. Even if the reports disappoint, I suspect the market will shrug, adjust, and continue forward. The bigger narrative—the dominance of tech, the allure of growth, the stories investors tell themselves—seems too strong to break.

And yet, I don’t buy.

Part of it is caution. Prices feel too high. Even if the next dip comes after earnings, I’m hesitant to step in. I’ve learned that chasing hype—or even what feels like a temporary pullback—can be dangerous. I prefer to watch, learn, and wait.

So here I am, sitting on the sidelines, observing the Magnificent 7 with a mix of curiosity and restraint. I admire the numbers, I follow the trends, but I don’t participate. For now, my approach is simple: understand, anticipate, and resist the temptation to buy just because the story feels compelling.

After all, the market will keep moving. Earnings will come and go. And somewhere down the line, maybe a better entry point will appear—one I’m ready for, both financially and mentally.

Until then, I watch. And I learn.

Meta $21B Deal With CoreWeave Strengthen AI Confidence?
CoreWeave has signed a $21 billion AI cloud infrastructure deal with Meta, reinforcing the long-term narrative of upgrading ad algorithms through AI. BNP Paribas projected Q1 revenue growth of 33% and EPS above $7, recommending the stock as a pre-earnings buy. Analysts highlighted AI-powered ad algorithm improvements driving monetization efficiency, with a 66% potential upside cited as a catalyst for institutional accumulation. How do you view the deal for the two? If Meta delivers 33% revenue growth, how far can its valuation expansion story run?
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Comments

  • Frankie jq
    01-25
    Frankie jq
    Well written, boring advice.
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