CNBC Daily Open: Markets rise in a relief rally, but Alphabet earnings disappoint

CNBC Daily Open: Markets rise in a relief rally, but Alphabet earnings disappoint


The Google booth at ISE 2025, a professional congress, on Feb. 4, 2025 in Barcelona, Spain.

Cesc Maymo | Getty Images News | Getty Images

U.S. President Donald Trump on Monday paused tariffs on Mexico and Canada (but, notably, not China), and, in so doing, also stemmed the dip in stocks, at least for now. Major U.S. benchmarks snapped a two-day losing streak in a relief rally.

With the temporary respite in U.S. tariffs on key countries, investors could turn their attention to earnings. But what they saw on Tuesday wasn’t likely to comfort them after the turmoil wreaked by tariffs.

Alphabet’s scorecard for its fourth-quarter performance missed the “A” grade so many expect from Big Tech names. Meanwhile, AMD’s data center sales, a key part of its business, missed estimates.

Investor disappointment was immediate: Shares of both companies slumped in extended trading, signaling that corporate fundamentals remain critical to stock performance.

What you need to know today

Alphabet falls short of revenue estimate
Alphabet fourth-quarter results missed revenue expectations, causing shares to fall as much as 9% in extended trading. The tech giant’s revenue came in at $96.47 billion, compared with $96.56 billion expected by LSEG. CEO Sundar Pichai said in the earnings release that Google expects to invest “approximately $75 billion in capital expenditures in 2025.”

AMD data center sales disappoint
Advanced Micro Devices shares slumped nearly 9% in extended trading after the company reported fourth-quarter data center sales of $3.86 billion, which missed the FactSet estimate of $4.14 billion. Net income came in at $482 million, down from $667 million a year ago. The chipmaker, however, beat Wall Street expectations for overall sales and earnings.

UBS share buyback fails to impress
UBS on Tuesday reported net profit attributable to shareholders of $770 million, compared with a $483 million estimate in a company-provided consensus estimate and with a mean forecast of $886.4 million in a LSEG poll of analysts. The bank also announced plans to repurchase up to $3 billion of shares in 2025 — but that didn’t impress investors, causing the bank’s shares to fall 7%.

Markets shake off tariff fears
U.S. stocks climbed on Tuesday as investors’ worries were assuaged by U.S. Donald Trump’s pause of tariffs on Mexico and Canada. The S&P 500 rose 0.72%, the Dow Jones Industrial Average added 0.3% and the Nasdaq Composite climbed 1.35%. Europe’s Stoxx 600 index added 0.22%. Italy-listed shares of Ferrari revved up 8% after the luxury automaker reported a 21% year-on-year jump in net profit for 2024.

December’s job openings shrink
U.S. job openings in December tumbled to 7.6 million, the lowest since September, and below the Dow Jones estimate for 8 million, the Bureau of Labor Statistics said in its monthly Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey. The report comes just a few days ahead of the nonfarm payrolls data for January. That is expected to show an addition of 169,000 jobs, with the unemployment rate holding steady at 4.1%.

[PRO] An under-the-radar opportunity in AI
Ark Invest’s Cathie Wood thinks there’s an under-the-radar investing opportunity in the artificial intelligence boom, and one of her high-conviction bets is up nearly 10% for the year so far. Wood also told CNBC she’s moving away from hardware, and looking at software plays in the artificial intelligence space.

And finally…

Flags outside the Fairmont Royal York in downtown Toronto, Feb. 3, 2025. 

Andrew Francis Wallace | Toronto Star | Getty Images

The Fed could find itself in a policy Catch-22 if tariffs spike inflation and slow growth

When Trump launched tariffs in his first term, inflation was low and the Fed was raising rates as it sought a “neutral” level. A manufacturing recession ensued in 2019. This time around, the targeted tariffs that Trump had previously used have been replaced by the threat of blanket duties — which could slow growth and raise prices, putting the U.S. Federal Reserve in a position where it has to weigh economic expansion against controlling inflation.



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