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Big tech stocks add $250 billion in market value after grilling by congressional panel

Chief executives including Amazon's Jeff Bezos, second from top left, and Facebook's Mark Zuckerberg, top right, testify.
Amazon Chief Executive Jeff Bezos, second from top left, and Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg, top right, appear before a House judiciary subcommittee with Google CEO Sundar Pichai, bottom left, and Apple CEO Tim Cook.
(Mandel Ngan/AP)
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A day after their leaders faced five hours of interrogation in a congressional hearing over allegations that their power and influence is out of control, four of the biggest American tech companies saw their combined market value swell by $250 billion, thanks to earnings that shocked even Wall Street.

Shares of Amazon.com Inc., Facebook Inc., Apple Inc. and Alphabet Inc. built on already-torrid rallies after each reported earnings or revenue that crushed analyst estimates. Combined, the companies put up sales of $200 billion in the three months that ended in June, with Amazon reporting a record quarter.

The earnings served as further evidence to frenzied stock investors that the companies’ automated, algorithmically optimized businesses are not only weathering the COVID-19 pandemic but are thriving in it. Politically, they could reinforce suspicions that growth in U.S. technology providers has become unhinged. The firms are booming while Old Economy industries such as retailing and car-making falter, pushing scores of companies into insolvency and costing millions of Americans their jobs.

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“I will tell you this, it’s good that these tech giants did their hearings yesterday and not tomorrow given all these results,” Wedbush analyst Dan Ives told Bloomberg Television.

Combined, Apple, Amazon, Google and Facebook boast a market-cap of more than $5 trillion, about a fifth of the entire Standard & Poor’s 500 index. While the average S&P 500 stock is still down 7% in 2020, an index of FANG (Facebook, Amazon, Netflix Inc. and
Google) stocks is up 34%.

The chief executives were forced to defend themselves from the sometimes withering criticism of lawmakers on the House Judiciary subcommittee who said they were abusing monopoly-like power to expand influence. Amazon’s Jeff Bezos was grilled on his company’s treatment of small merchants who use Amazon’s online marketplace, while Sundar Pichai, CEO of Alphabet, faced questions about whether its Google unit exploited its dominant position in advertising.

“These companies as they exist today have monopoly power,” said Representative David Cicilline (D-R.I.), who is leading a yearlong House investigation into the companies. “Some need to be broken up, all need to be heavily regulated.”

In written testimony and in their responses, the CEOs told the panel that competition is thriving across the tech industry and consumers are benefiting.

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