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Apple’s $100 Billion Counteroffer to the Capex Arms Race

Stephanie Dugan by Stephanie Dugan
May 1, 2026
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Apple's $100 Billion Counteroffer to the Capex Arms Race
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Dear readers,

Yesterday we wrote that the market rewarded companies showing receipts and punished those showing ambition without them. That filter just got sharper. Apple reported after the bell on Thursday and delivered the most emphatic answer yet to the question dominating this earnings season: Does winning the AI era require spending like it? Cupertino’s answer is a $100 billion buyback and a 17 percent revenue beat. No new hyperscale data centers required.

The S&P 500 closed at 7,209 on Wednesday, clearing the 7,200 mark for the first time. The Dow finished at 49,652. The tech sector posted a monthly gain of 17 percent in April — its strongest since November 2002. And Apple’s after-hours reaction, a gain of roughly 3 percent extending to about 3.6 percent in premarket trading on Friday, suggests the rally has room to breathe.

The Numbers Behind Apple’s Bet on Discipline

Apple’s second fiscal quarter of 2026 was not merely good. Revenue climbed 17 percent to a record $111.2 billion. Earnings per share jumped 22 percent to $2.01. The iPhone 17 generated $56.99 billion in revenue, up 22 percent, despite supply constraints that would have dented a less efficient operation. Services hit a new all-time high at $30.98 billion. And China — the market that had analysts reaching for their worry beads a year ago — delivered revenue of $20.5 billion, up 28 percent.

But the headline is capital allocation. Alphabet, Amazon, Meta, and Microsoft are collectively planning nearly $700 billion in capex for AI infrastructure. Apple’s response: abandon the “net cash neutral” policy it has maintained since 2018, sit on $62 billion in net cash, authorize $100 billion in new share repurchases, and raise the quarterly dividend 4 percent to $0.27. In the March quarter alone, $15 billion flowed back to shareholders.

Yesterday we drew the line between Amazon and Alphabet — companies converting infrastructure spending into visible cloud revenue — and Meta, which is asking investors to fund a hardware vision with a longer payoff horizon. Apple occupies a third category entirely. It is not building the AI infrastructure. It is not selling AI infrastructure. It is integrating other people’s AI infrastructure into the world’s most profitable consumer ecosystem and returning the savings.

Asset-Light AI: Partnerships Over Poured Concrete

The strategy is deliberate. Rather than training massive foundation models, Apple relies on partnerships — Google’s Gemini, OpenAI’s ChatGPT — and routes the heaviest computation through on-device processing to preserve its privacy positioning. A recent leak in the Apple Support App (version 5.13) revealed internal “Claude.md” development files, pointing to an integration of Anthropic’s technology into internal workflows. That is three of the four leading frontier model providers now linked to Apple in some capacity.

The investment is going into software, not server farms. Research and development spending rose roughly 34 percent to $11.4 billion in the March quarter. WWDC on June 8 is expected to showcase iOS 27 with a dedicated Siri mode in the Camera app and generative AI photo editing tools — “Extend” for generative fill and “Reframe” for Spatial Photos. Apple is spending aggressively. It is simply spending on code rather than kilowatts.

Cook’s Exit, Ternus’s Inheritance, and the Memory Problem

Tim Cook will hand the CEO title to 50-year-old hardware chief John Ternus on September 1, moving to Executive Chairman. He leaves his successor a parting gift: guidance for the fiscal third quarter calling for revenue growth of 14 to 17 percent, well above the analyst consensus of roughly 9 percent.

He also leaves a warning. Cook flagged an intensifying “memory crunch” — sharply rising costs for memory chips that will weigh on margins in the current quarter. Mac mini, Mac Studio, and the new MacBook Neo all face multi-month delivery delays driven by high demand and chip shortages. The asset-light model has limits. When the constraint is silicon rather than software, Apple is as exposed as anyone.

The Macro Frame: A Fed on Hold, Oil Above $110, Bitcoin Stalled

The Federal Reserve held its benchmark rate at 3.50 to 3.75 percent this week, its third consecutive pause. Cleveland Fed President Beth Hammack dissented, criticizing the maintenance of an easing bias and pointing to broad-based inflation risks compounded by Brent crude trading near $110 — its highest level since 2022. Bitcoin is consolidating around $77,000 after an April gain of roughly 12 percent, held back by reduced rate-cut expectations.

Ahead, the delayed January nonfarm payrolls report — pushed to May 11 by a partial government shutdown — looms as the next macro test. Early indicators are soft: ADP reported only 22,000 private-sector jobs added in January, and layoffs across industries hit their highest January level since 2009 before easing in February.

Germany: Unions Draw Lines, Deutsche Bahn Courts Spontaneity

On the other side of the Atlantic, May Day brought political friction. DGB chair Yasmin Fahimi used the central rally in Nuremberg to announce fierce resistance to potential federal government cuts to pensions, healthcare, and social benefits. North Rhine-Westphalia Minister-President Hendrik Wüst called for pragmatism in Mülheim an der Ruhr, urging an end to the “bashing” of employers.

Deutsche Bahn, meanwhile, is trying something new: starting May 9, “last-minute” tickets for ICE and Intercity trains will be bookable on Saturdays and Sundays for travel in the following week — a bid to capture spontaneous long-distance travelers beyond the established Deutschlandticket.

The Takeaway

This earnings season has sorted Big Tech into three camps. Amazon and Alphabet are spending heavily on AI infrastructure and converting that spending into cloud revenue investors can measure. Meta is spending heavily and asking for patience. Apple is barely spending on infrastructure at all — and returning $100 billion to shareholders instead.

The market’s verdict on Thursday was clear: all three approaches can work, but only if the cash flow is already there. Apple’s asset-light model does not answer whether the hyperscalers’ massive bets will pay off. What it does answer is that the AI era does not require every winner to pour concrete. Sometimes the most profitable position in an arms race is selling to both sides — or, in Apple’s case, integrating both sides into a device that fits in your pocket and sending the difference back to shareholders.

Have a great weekend.

Best regards,
The StocksToday.com Editorial

Stephanie Dugan

Stephanie Dugan

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