Wall Street is no longer treating the Magnificent Seven as a single trade — and the gap between AI winners and laggards is widening by the week.
The S&P 500 edged up 0.3% to 7,504 in Tuesday trading, but the headline masked a deepening fracture within the index's most valuable cohort. The Magnificent Seven — Apple, Microsoft, Alphabet, Amazon, Nvidia, Meta Platforms and Tesla — have diverged by as much as 18 percentage points in year-to-date performance, with the market increasingly rewarding companies that can show tangible AI monetization over those spending heavily with unclear returns.
"The market is becoming much more selective within the Mag 7," said Shay Boloor, an analyst tracking mega-cap technology. "The debate around AI capital expenditure is now increasingly company-specific — investors are separating the winners from the laggards based on who can actually generate returns on that spending."
The divergence is stark. Meta Platforms has fallen 11.5% year to date despite reporting first-quarter revenue of $56.3 billion, up 33% from a year earlier, and earnings per share of $10.44 that beat the $6.66 consensus by a wide margin. Microsoft has fared worse, dropping 18.9% year to date even as its Azure cloud business grew 40% and its commercial remaining performance obligations nearly doubled to $627 billion. Amazon, down roughly 12% in June alone, plans $200 billion in capital expenditures this year — the most of any Mag 7 member and likely any company globally — as it builds out AI data center capacity.
The underperformance of these hyperscalers stands in contrast to chipmakers, which have captured the bulk of AI enthusiasm. Semiconductors posted their best quarter on record in the three months through June, as investors favored companies that actually make the hardware powering artificial intelligence over those spending billions to deploy it.
Wall Street sees a rotation back toward hyperscalers
Major equity strategists expect the divergence to narrow. Mike Wilson, chief US equity strategist at Morgan Stanley, wrote in a recent client note that he anticipates a rotation back toward hyperscalers and away from semiconductor stocks. "You can't have this divergence continue — it's not sustainable," Wilson told Bloomberg Television.
Ben Snider, chief US equity strategist at Goldman Sachs, told Business Insider that resilient spending combined with now-attractive valuations make hyperscalers a compelling investment. JPMorgan has also laid out a scenario where the gap shrinks as hyperscalers improve monetization and begin generating revenue that captures a larger share of the AI opportunity.
The valuation gap supports the thesis. Meta trades at roughly 18 times forward earnings with a price-to-earnings-to-growth ratio of 0.80, while Microsoft carries a trailing price-to-earnings multiple of 23. Both are spending aggressively — Meta guided fiscal 2026 capital expenditures to between $125 billion and $145 billion, while Microsoft's calendar 2026 CapEx is tracking toward $190 billion, an 84% increase from a year earlier.
The next test arrives with earnings season
The upcoming Mag 7 earnings season, expected within weeks, will provide the next critical test of whether AI spending is translating into tangible results. For Meta, the question is whether its advertising monopoly — which funds its AI build without reliance on a partner — can continue to generate the cash flow needed to justify its capital outlay. The company's 30.2% return on equity and self-owned AI models give it a structural advantage, according to analysts.
For Microsoft, the challenge is whether Azure's 40% growth rate can outpace a CapEx line that has expanded nearly 85% year over year. The company's $627 billion contracted backlog provides unusual revenue visibility, but near-term cash flow remains under pressure.
Amazon faces the most scrutiny given its $200 billion spending plan. Its AWS cloud platform holds a backlog of $364 billion in demand, but investors are questioning when that will translate into profits. The stock trades at just under 28 times projected earnings, below its three-year average.
The 10-year US Treasury yield held near 4.35% on Tuesday, while the US dollar index edged lower, providing a modest tailwind for equities. The Cboe Volatility Index, or VIX, remained subdued near 15, suggesting the broader market has not yet priced in the risk of a sharper Mag 7 correction.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.