
Gulf Today, Staff Reporter
Three of the world’s most valuable companies report earnings within 48 hours of each other this week, and for investors across the Gulf, the implications reach well beyond Wall Street.
Microsoft publishes its fiscal third-quarter results after market close today, April 29. Meta Platforms follows also after the close. Apple then reports tomorrow, April 30.
The reports arrive at a tense moment. Markets have been unsettled by trade tariff uncertainty, and investors are increasingly impatient for proof that massive AI spending is paying off. Microsoft and Meta alone are part of a group expected to spend more than $500 billion combined on capital expenditure this year, largely driven by data centres, chips and AI infrastructure.
Fadi Abou Ras, CEO of AvaTrade Middle East, a regulated online trading broker, says the three companies should be read together rather than in isolation. All three carry serious weight in US indices and are widely held through the funds and ETFs that form the backbone of many Gulf portfolios.
“Each one is an indicator of a different part of the economy. Apple is a window into consumer demand and how confident people feel about spending, Microsoft tells you about enterprise tech budgets and cloud demand and Meta is a read on digital advertising and broader sentiment around the online economy. Together they give a useful snapshot of where confidence is building and where it’s being tested.”
The time zone adds particular pressure for Gulf investors. Results drop in the middle of the night UAE time, with markets already moved by morning. Abou Ras urges caution.
“US after-hours news can land late at night locally, then become the next morning’s headline. That creates a feeling that you need to respond quickly. But speed isn’t a strategy. The first reaction is rarely the final one.”
Beyond the reported numbers, he says investors should watch management outlook and tone, because that shapes what markets expect next, as well as signals on whether AI spending is accelerating or pulling back, and margins. On the question of investor trust during high-attention market weeks, Abou Ras is direct.
“Volatility and information overload test decision-making, and they test operational standards too. Investors should expect clear risk disclosure, responsible communication, and consistent service from the trading platforms they use. For us, regulation is a core value that underpins how we operate and builds trust with our clients.”
Abou Ras said AvaTrade’s regulation by the ADGM Financial Services Regulatory Authority means client fund protection, transparent pricing and strong governance standards are not optional extras, they are built into how the business operates.
“The best decisions in volatile weeks come from discipline and risk awareness, so focus on process, not prediction,” he concluded.
