Apple (NASDAQ: AAPL | AAPL Price Prediction) and Amazon (NASDAQ: AMZN) just posted quarters that read like philosophical opposites. Apple booked $111.2 billion in Q2 FY26 revenue with an eighth consecutive EPS beat. Amazon rang up $181.52 billion in Q1 FY26 and reaffirmed a $200 billion 2026 capex plan. Both grew roughly 16.6%. Only one is returning the cash.
iPhone 17 Carries Apple. AWS Reacceleration Carries Amazon.
Apple leaned on the iPhone 17 family, which drove iPhone revenue to $56.99 billion, a March quarter record. Services hit an all-time high at $30.98 billion with a 76.7% gross margin. Tim Cook framed the quarter as “our best March quarter ever, with revenue of $111.2 billion and double-digit growth across every geographic segment.”
Amazon’s story sat inside the data center. AWS revenue reached $37.6 billion, up 28%, the fastest growth in 15 quarters. Custom silicon crossed a $20 billion annual run rate, and Trainium commitments now exceed $225 billion. Advertising ran at $70 billion TTM. The engine is real. The bill is enormous.
Cash Back to Owners vs. Cash Into Silicon
Apple raised its dividend 4% to $0.27 and authorized a fresh $100 billion buyback. Cook confirmed Apple is collaborating with Google on foundational models while investing incrementally in-house. Amazon spent $44.2 billion in a single quarter, pushing TTM free cash flow to $1.2 billion, a 95% collapse. Long-term debt sits at $119.1 billion, up from $65.6 billion. That is the price of Andy Jassy’s “once-in-a-lifetime opportunity” framing.
| Lens | Apple | Amazon |
| Core Bet | On-device Apple Intelligence | Trainium, Bedrock, Leo satellites |
| 2026 Capital Move | $100B buyback authorization | $200B capex plan |
| Key Vulnerability | Memory cost inflation, tariffs | FCF compression, debt load |
The Next Six Months Will Test Both Theses
Apple flagged “significantly higher memory costs” for the June quarter, and John Ternus takes over as CEO on September 1, 2026. WWDC’s AI reveal matters. For Amazon, I want to see whether the $364 billion AWS backlog converts on schedule and whether Q2 lands inside the $194 to $199 billion guide without further FCF damage.
Why I Lean Toward Apple Right Now
If I have to pick one today, I take Apple. The setup fits what institutional rotation away from hyper-leveraged infrastructure spend looks like, and shares are already up 16.03% YTD versus Amazon’s 7.22%. A 41 P/E is not cheap, but the record Services line and $100 billion buyback give me something to hold when memory prices bite. Amazon’s near-term risk profile is the problem. If AWS demand wobbles even slightly against that $200 billion spend, the multiple compresses fast. I would revisit Amazon when free cash flow re-expands or when the Trainium backlog starts converting to reported operating margin. Until then, the disciplined balance sheet wins my vote.
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