Canyon
【Week 3– My Portfolio Health Check】
Microsoft’s recent pullback was interesting because the earnings themselves were still strong, especially in Azure and AI growth. The market reaction shows that investors are becoming more sensitive to valuation, AI spending, and future expectations rather than just headline results. This earnings season reminded me that even high-quality companies can experience volatility when expectations are elevated, so portfolio positioning and risk management remain important.
#repost for Week 1 My Portfolio Health Check 👍🏻
Microsoft (MSFT) recently pulled back with the broader tech sell-off, despite strong fundamentals. Short-term pressure is driven by valuation concerns, but Azure growth and AI monetization still support long-term upside.
Apple Inc. remains one of the most disciplined operators in big tech, balancing innovation with capital returns. Even as hardware cycles fluctuate, its growing services segment and ecosystem stickiness provide resilience, positioning Apple to navigate slower global demand while protecting profitability and long-term shareholder value.
Apple Inc. (AAPL) continues to demonstrate resilience through ecosystem strength, consistent cash flow, and innovation pipeline making it a core long-term holding despite short-term market volatility.
NVIDIA continues to redefine market leadership as AI demand drives exponential growth in data center revenue, but valuation remains the key debate. The stock reflects near-perfect execution expectations—any slowdown in AI spending or margin compression could trigger volatility despite its dominant positioning.
$Microsoft(MSFT.US)The post-earnings dip in Microsoft reflects a market that was priced for near-perfection, particularly around AI-driven growth. While headline numbers remained solid, any moderation in Azure growth or margin pressure tied to aggressive AI capex likely triggered a reset in expectations
$Microsoft(MSFT.US)Microsoft’s fiscal Q1 2026 earnings highlighted strong AI-driven growth, with Azure near 40% and robust cloud demand boosting revenue and backlog. However, sharply higher capex and margin pressure signaled an investment-heavy phase, shifting focus toward whether AI scale can translate into sustainable, high-margin returns rather than just top-line expansion.
$Palantir Tech(PLTR.US) is set to release its Q4 2025 earnings after market close today. Last quarter, the company reported $550M in revenue, driven by a mix of government contracts and growing commercial clients.
As an investor, I’m keeping an eye on commercial adoption, AI initiatives, and new client growth these are the numbers that could move the stock tomorrow.
💡 Thought: Even small surprises in revenue or contract wins could set the tone for 2026.
$BUSYMING(01768.HK)’s IPO arrives as Hong Kong’s primary market shows selective recovery. Beyond the debut price action, investors may want to focus on post-listing liquidity, margin sustainability, and whether growth assumptions translate into consistent earnings.
In the current environment, IPO performance is often shaped less by the listing day and more by execution in the first few reporting cycles.
$Microsoft(MSFT.US)tends to hold up better during market volatility because a large portion of it’s revenue comes from long term enterprise contracts rather than discretionary consumer spending. This reduces earnings uncertainty, which is why investors often rotate into MSFT during risk off periods, supporting its valuation even when broader tech sentiment weakens
$BABA-W(09988.HK) is no longer just an e-commerce name the market is increasingly pricing it as a technology platform pivoting into AI and cloud infrastructure, while grappling with slowing consumer demand and lofty valuation expectations. Growth in cloud and AI offers a long-term narrative, but near-term risks include regulatory headwinds and the challenge of justifying premium multiples if core retail momentum fades
$Hang Seng Index(00HSI.HK)has evolved into a hybrid market that reflects China’s economic cycle more than Hong Kong’s domestic fundamentals. Its performance is increasingly driven by mainland policy follow-through, earnings durability in platform and financial stocks, and cross-border capital flows via Stock Connect. Valuation alone is no longer a catalyst; sustained upside depends on whether policy support translates into real profit recovery and renewed confidence from long-term global investors.
$CATL(03750.HK)CATL’s HK stock debut underscores a shift in the EV supply chain: battery makers are no longer just component suppliers, but strategic bottlenecks. Valuation will increasingly reflect pricing power, chemistry innovation, and geopolitical resilience.



