
Market Trends in 3 Minutes
May 1, 2026
NVDA and TSMC Lead $725B Capex Cycle as Market Shifts to Inference

Executive Summary
Capex Supercycle: Alphabet, Amazon, Meta, and Microsoft are accelerating AI investment toward a projected $725 billion by 2026, creating a massive tailwind for semiconductor and infrastructure providers.
Cloud Monetization Divide: Alphabet and Amazon show immediate revenue acceleration through cloud growth, while Meta faces skepticism over "tangible metrics" for its $145 billion internal AI spend.
Hardware Transformation: The industry is entering an "inference phase," driving a pivot toward custom silicon (TPUs, Trainium) and a resurgence in CPU server demand through 2027.
Historic Market Rally: April marked a "boom" period with the NASDAQ gaining 15% and the tech sector rising 20%, fueled by double-digit earnings growth and positive estimate revisions.
Corporate Dynamics
GOOGL (Alphabet) (Google): The Infrastructure Monetization Leader
News: Revenue for GOOGL Cloud surged over 60%, helping shares reach a record high with a 33% monthly gain. The company's backlog doubled quarter-over-quarter as it prepares to increase capital expenditure to $190 billion.
Outlook: The doubling of the backlog directly secures a multi-year revenue trajectory. GOOGL's internal development of TPUs provides a competitive moat against rising merchant silicon costs, sustaining growth while peers face margin pressure.
AMZN (Amazon): AWS Acceleration and Custom Silicon Integration
News: AWS reported 28% growth, accelerating from 24% in the prior quarter, supported by a backlog exceeding $360 billion. Monthly stock performance saw a 27% gain.
Outlook: Revenue growth is increasingly driven by custom silicon (Trainium and Graviton). By vertically integrating hardware with partners like MRVL, AMZN strengthens its moat, ensuring long-term margin sustainability despite massive capex.
Executive Summary
Capex Supercycle: Alphabet, Amazon, Meta, and Microsoft are accelerating AI investment toward a projected $725 billion by 2026, creating a massive tailwind for semiconductor and infrastructure providers.
Cloud Monetization Divide: Alphabet and Amazon show immediate revenue acceleration through cloud growth, while Meta faces skepticism over "tangible metrics" for its $145 billion internal AI spend.
Hardware Transformation: The industry is entering an "inference phase," driving a pivot toward custom silicon (TPUs, Trainium) and a resurgence in CPU server demand through 2027.
Historic Market Rally: April marked a "boom" period with the NASDAQ gaining 15% and the tech sector rising 20%, fueled by double-digit earnings growth and positive estimate revisions.
Corporate Dynamics
GOOGL (Alphabet) (Google): The Infrastructure Monetization Leader
News: Revenue for GOOGL Cloud surged over 60%, helping shares reach a record high with a 33% monthly gain. The company's backlog doubled quarter-over-quarter as it prepares to increase capital expenditure to $190 billion.
Outlook: The doubling of the backlog directly secures a multi-year revenue trajectory. GOOGL's internal development of TPUs provides a competitive moat against rising merchant silicon costs, sustaining growth while peers face margin pressure.
AMZN (Amazon): AWS Acceleration and Custom Silicon Integration
News: AWS reported 28% growth, accelerating from 24% in the prior quarter, supported by a backlog exceeding $360 billion. Monthly stock performance saw a 27% gain.
Outlook: Revenue growth is increasingly driven by custom silicon (Trainium and Graviton). By vertically integrating hardware with partners like MRVL, AMZN strengthens its moat, ensuring long-term margin sustainability despite massive capex.
MSFT (Microsoft): Enterprise AI Scaling Amid Margin Scrutiny
News: Azure grew 40% this quarter, contributing to a combined backlog with GOOGL of over $1 trillion. However, shares dipped due to a "modest acceleration" forecast and concerns that Co-pilot costs are pressuring free cash flow.
Outlook: While the revenue base is expanding, the "modest" forward guidance suggests a temporary ceiling on growth until infrastructure capacity catches up with enterprise demand.
META (Meta): High-Stakes Internal AI Pivot
News: META raised its 2024 capex outlook to $145 billion, causing a 9% stock drop as investors noted a lack of "tangible metrics" for AI ROI. Ad pricing rose 12%, but shares ended the month down 8%.
Outlook: Lacking a public cloud to monetize its infrastructure, META's revenue growth relies entirely on internal engagement and ad efficiency. High memory and energy costs pose a risk to short-term valuation logic.
QCOM (Qualcomm): Data Center and Custom Silicon Breakthrough
News: CEO Cristiano Amon announced custom AI chips for a major hyperscaler by late 2024. The company is developing an "agentic CPU" and purpose-built accelerators that do not require HBM.
Outlook: QCOM is pivoting from mobile to the data center. Management expects this to represent "material" revenue—billions of dollars—by fiscal 2027, diversifying its revenue stream beyond smartphone cycles.
INTC (Intel): Historic Monthly Rebound
News: INTC recorded its best month ever, up over 110%, surpassing its dot-com era highs. The company projects sustained double-digit server growth over several years.
Outlook: Driven by the shift in GPU-to-CPU ratios (moving from 8:1 to 4:1), INTC is positioned to capture massive "downstream" revenue as infrastructure matures into the inference phase.
NVDA (Nvidia): Resilience Amid Inference Shift
News: Monthly shares rose 14-15%, though the stock saw a 3.5% drag on the final day as markets reacted to the rise of custom silicon and inference-focused chips.
Outlook: While NVDA remains the primary beneficiary of the capex boom, the shift toward inference and internal TPUs/ASICs may introduce more competitive volatility into its long-term valuation.
AMD (Advanced Micro Devices), MRVL (Marvell), and MU (Micron): Semiconductor Renaissance
News: AMD saw its best month since 2001, while MRVL and MU reached performance levels not seen since 2000.
Outlook: These firms are benefiting from a "tailwinds" effect where hyperscaler spending creates an inescapable demand for advanced memory and specialized accelerators.
AVGO (Broadcom): Infrastructure Beneficiary
News: Shares surged 35% over 21 trading days, benefiting from the industry shift toward custom silicon and networking infrastructure.
Outlook: As hyperscalers like GOOGL and AMZN prioritize internal chip designs, AVGO’s position as a facilitator for custom silicon secures its revenue trajectory through the next capex cycle.
Anthropic: Private Market Valuation Surge
News: The AI startup is weighing a funding round at a valuation exceeding $900 billion, potentially surpassing OpenAI. Its "Mythos" model is currently being tested by the NSA.
Outlook: High private valuations suggest massive institutional appetite for AI models that can secure national security or enterprise contracts, despite the lack of public liquidity.
SpaceX: Dominance in Space Infrastructure
News: 137 Ventures raised $700 million across new funds to support SpaceX, which could seek a valuation up to $2 trillion.
Outlook: Continued investor support highlights SpaceX’s unique moat in satellite and launch infrastructure, positioning it for a potentially record-breaking IPO or secondary market activity.
AAPL (Apple): Leadership Transition and Earnings Anticipation
News: Shares rose 7% for the month. The company announced that John Ternus will eventually succeed Tim Cook as CEO.
Outlook: The upcoming earnings will be critical to determine if AAPL can maintain its premium valuation as it enters the leadership transition phase.
TSLA (Tesla): Relative Underperformance
News: TSLA lagged other "Mag 7" peers with a modest 3.4% monthly gain.
Outlook: Compared to the high-growth cloud and chip sectors, TSLA's immediate AI-related revenue impact remains less clear to investors, affecting its short-term competitive standing.
DELL: The Downstream Winner
News: DELL is seeing 25% earnings growth driven by demand for GPU servers from tier-2 cloud providers.
Outlook: As the "inference phase" takes hold, DELL is capturing the overflow demand from enterprises unable to secure direct hyperscaler capacity.
Stripe and SMG (Scotts Miracle-Gro): Digital Transition
News: Stripe partnered with GOOGL for Gemini app transactions. SMG expects 80% of growth from e-commerce by 2030.
Outlook: These shifts illustrate how AI and digital platforms are becoming the primary revenue engines even for traditional industrial and finance companies.
Industry Trends
The Great Capex Pivot: From Training to Inference
Analysis: The industry is shifting from the initial "training" phase to the "inference phase." This is causing a structural change in server architecture, moving from an 8:1 to a 4:1 GPU-to-CPU ratio to support AI deployment.
Outlook: This shift creates a massive secondary market for connectivity (Amphenol, Credo), fiber (Lumentum, Coherent), and CPU providers (Intel), ensuring the boom lasts through 2027.
The Rise of Custom Silicon and ASICs
Analysis: Hyperscalers are increasingly moving away from general-purpose GPUs toward custom chips like TPUs, Trainium, and Qualcomm’s new accelerators to avoid high component costs and memory pricing.
Outlook: This trend benefits custom silicon partners like Broadcom and Marvell while forcing traditional chipmakers to innovate in "agentic" and memory-efficient architectures.
Energy and Capacity Constraints
Analysis: The massive scale of AI compute is raising concerns regarding electricity capacity. High energy and oil costs are identified as potential threats to the margins of companies requiring massive power for data centers.
Outlook: Future performance may depend as much on energy efficiency and power access as it does on chip performance.
Market Sentiment
Bifurcated Sentiment: Cloud Yields vs. Speculative Spending
Analysis: Given the 9% drop in Meta and the 33% surge in Alphabet, market sentiment has shifted from "AI potential" to "AI performance." Investors are penalizing companies that cannot provide "tangible metrics" for their massive capex.
Outlook: Expect continued volatility for firms focused on internal AI (Meta) while cloud providers (Amazon, Alphabet) enjoy a "flight to quality" based on concrete backlog growth.
Unanimous Expectations for a Multi-Year Cycle
Analysis: Despite minor earnings sell-offs in Microsoft and Meta, the 20% monthly gain in the tech sector and 38% surge in semiconductors reflect a unanimous professional belief in a sustained cycle.
Outlook: Forward-looking observations suggest that as long as double-digit server growth and estimate revisions remain positive, the "concentration risk" in the S&P 500 will be ignored in favor of growth.
Important Disclosure
This newsletter is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice. Content is generated by AI and may contain inaccuracies; always verify data independently before trading. Investing involves significant risk of loss. AlchemyJ is not a registered financial advisor. By reading this, you agree to our terms.

