Tech Views and Takeaways From 4Q25 Earnings

Key takeaways

  • 4Q25 S&P 500 earnings are on track for another quarter of double-digit growth
  • While tech has lagged YTD, MAGMAN* has delivered another strong earnings season
  • Market performance is broadening on improving fundamentals

Recent tech headlines have stirred up fresh disruption fears, weighing on software stocks and the sector more broadly. Below, we break down key takeaways from 4Q25 earnings and share our latest views on tech:

4Q25 earnings season momentum continues its strong drive

4Q25 earnings season is off to a strong start. So far, over 70% of the S&P 500’s market cap has reported results, and earnings are on track to rise roughly 13% year over year – up from just 7% at the start of earnings season. This marks the fifth consecutive quarter of double-digit EPS growth, a streak last seen in 2018. To date, roughly 80% of companies are beating estimates – above the five-year average – and in aggregate are surpassing forecasts by roughly 8% - the strongest since 1Q21. Yet, despite strong 4Q25 results, the most notable storylines this earnings season have revolved around rotation dynamics and the recent sell-off in tech stocks.

Mega-cap tech has dominated the field

While software has dominated recent headlines, mega‑cap tech has quietly delivered another strong 4Q earnings season. With five of the six mega-cap names (NVDA is still to come) having reported, MAGMAN* is on pace to grow its earnings 26% year over year and has collectively beaten estimates by roughly 8%. Consensus estimates have been revised modestly higher, with upward revisions still outpacing the broader index. 2026 MAGMAN earnings are on track to rise 25% – the fourth straight year outpacing the rest of the S&P 500 Index – and margins are expected to expand to 29%, a four-point increase vs. last year and over double the broader index. Despite more discerning investor sentiment, each of the mega-cap names has raised capex estimates, providing support for AI infrastructure beneficiaries, such as semiconductors. While dispersion within tech will likely persist as AI disruption creates winners and losers, we remain overweight mega-cap tech in 2026, given the still-supportive fundamental backdrop.