Resource Recycling
  • The Latest
  • Analysis
    • All
    • Certification Scorecard
    • Industry Announcements
    • Opinion
    The electronics recycling industry is undergoing a transformation from labor-intensive manual operations to highly automated, AI-driven facilities that use advanced robotics, cleaner chemistry and digital tracking systems to extract critical materials.

    The cyber-physical MRF: AI and robotics reshape e-waste recovery

    Certification scorecard for the week of Feb. 9, 2026

    Meta-Corning deal signals IT hardware retirement wave

    Meta-Corning deal signals IT hardware retirement wave

    Malaysia clamps down on illegal e-waste imports amid probes

    Malaysia clamps down on illegal e-waste imports amid probes

    URT builds alliance to remake electronics plastics at scale

    ICYMI: Top 5 e-scrap stories from January 2026

    The electronics recycling industry is undergoing a transformation from labor-intensive manual operations to highly automated, AI-driven facilities that use advanced robotics, cleaner chemistry and digital tracking systems to extract critical materials.

    Certification scorecard for the week of Feb. 2, 2026

    Auditors warn EU may fall short on critical metals

    Auditors warn EU may fall short on critical metals

    Industry announcements for January 2026

    Industry announcements for February 2026

    ICYMI: Top 5 recycling stories from January 2026

  • Conferences
  • Publications

    Other Topics

    Textiles
    Organics
    Packaging
    Glass
    Brand Owners

    Metals
    Technology
    Research
    Markets
    Grant Watch

    All Topics

Subscribe
No Result
View All Result
Resource Recycling
  • The Latest
  • Analysis
    • All
    • Certification Scorecard
    • Industry Announcements
    • Opinion
    The electronics recycling industry is undergoing a transformation from labor-intensive manual operations to highly automated, AI-driven facilities that use advanced robotics, cleaner chemistry and digital tracking systems to extract critical materials.

    The cyber-physical MRF: AI and robotics reshape e-waste recovery

    Certification scorecard for the week of Feb. 9, 2026

    Meta-Corning deal signals IT hardware retirement wave

    Meta-Corning deal signals IT hardware retirement wave

    Malaysia clamps down on illegal e-waste imports amid probes

    Malaysia clamps down on illegal e-waste imports amid probes

    URT builds alliance to remake electronics plastics at scale

    ICYMI: Top 5 e-scrap stories from January 2026

    The electronics recycling industry is undergoing a transformation from labor-intensive manual operations to highly automated, AI-driven facilities that use advanced robotics, cleaner chemistry and digital tracking systems to extract critical materials.

    Certification scorecard for the week of Feb. 2, 2026

    Auditors warn EU may fall short on critical metals

    Auditors warn EU may fall short on critical metals

    Industry announcements for January 2026

    Industry announcements for February 2026

    ICYMI: Top 5 recycling stories from January 2026

  • Conferences
  • Publications

    Other Topics

    Textiles
    Organics
    Packaging
    Glass
    Brand Owners

    Metals
    Technology
    Research
    Markets
    Grant Watch

    All Topics

Subscribe
No Result
View All Result
Resource Recycling
No Result
View All Result
Home E-Scrap

Earnings results point to active IT hardware lifecycles

byDavid Daoud
November 6, 2025
in E-Scrap
Earnings results point to active IT hardware lifecycles
Earnings from Microsoft, Apple and Amazon show robust demand for cloud and AI hardware, signaling steady IT refresh cycles and growing feedstock for recycling firms. | MMD Creative / Shutterstock

Earnings season is in full swing and the latest results from Microsoft, Apple and Amazon show that the global technology hardware cycle remains extremely active heading into late 2025. 

Despite economic headwinds, all three companies reported solid revenue and profit growth driven by enterprise cloud demand, AI-related hardware refreshes and sustained consumer appetite for premium devices. Their results confirm that hardware deployment and replacement remain central to their growth strategies and that a new wave of servers, laptops and connected devices will soon enter downstream disposition and recycling channels. 

Microsoft reported its fiscal first-quarter 2026 results on October 29, posting revenue of $77.7 billion, up 18% year over year. Net income rose 23%, supported by continuing strength in Azure cloud services and enterprise software. 

Apple followed on October 30 with fourth-quarter 2025 revenue of $102.5 billion, up 8% from a year earlier and a 13% rise in profit. The company noted stable iPhone and Mac demand and record performance in its services business. The same day, Amazon reported third-quarter 2025 revenue of 180.2 billion dollars, a 13% increase, with Amazon Web Services (AWS) revenue up 20%. From an IT hardware market perspective, these three companies together drive a significant share of global IT spending, from consumer devices to hyperscale data-center hardware and their growth should normally ensure continuous movement of physical assets through the technology lifecycle.

For the end-of-life sectors, grouping IT asset disposition (ITAD) and electronics recycling, these earnings bode well, essentially pointing to sustained hardware turnover across both enterprise and consumer markets. Microsoft’s cloud expansion means ongoing infrastructure replacement as customers modernize data centers and deploy new AI-capable systems. Each round of upgrades generates retired servers, storage arrays and networking gear requiring certified data erasure, refurbishment, or responsible recycling. 

Amazon’s surge in AWS investment mirrors that pattern, indicating future decommissioning cycles as older racks and systems are phased out. Meanwhile, Apple’s sales momentum reinforces the steady flow of end-user devices feeding trade-in, refurbishment and material-recovery programs. The combination of enterprise and consumer refresh activity translates into higher volumes of recoverable electronics entering ITAD and recycling channels well into 2026.

Looking ahead, the three tech giants expect continued investment that will sustain hardware lifecycles. Microsoft guided for further double-digit growth and ongoing capital spending on cloud and AI infrastructure, implying new data-center build-outs today and more decommissioning projects tomorrow. Apple’s management also expressed confidence in steady device demand through the holiday quarter and highlighted the company’s growing trade-in ecosystem, ensuring a recurring stream of recoverable units for refurbishers and recyclers. For its part, Amazon forecast elevated spending on AWS expansion and logistics automation, suggesting continued asset rotation within its vast server and supply-chain equipment base.

The positive side of this outlook is about strong replacement activity, consistent feedstock for ITAD providers and expanding corporate attention to lifecycle accountability. The risks are equally tangible: potential slowdowns in enterprise capital budgets, continued hardware complexity and rising compliance costs. For ITAD and recycling operators, the task is to evolve alongside their largest upstream partners, investing in secure processing, automation and verifiable sustainability metrics.

So far, the takeaway from this round of earnings is that the hardware engine of the technology industry is still running at full speed and every upgrade at Microsoft, Apple and Amazon sets another round of assets in motion. For the companies charged with recovering, refurbishing and recycling those systems, the work ahead will be steady, demanding and increasingly central to how technology growth remains sustainable.

Tags: MarketsOEMs
TweetShare
David Daoud

David Daoud

David Daoud is a contributor to Resource Recycling and E-Scrap News, covering IT asset disposition, electronics recycling, and circular IT governance. He is the founder of and current Principal Analyst at Compliance Standards LLC, where he conducts independent research and advisory work on ITAD markets, sustainability and ESG compliance, data security, and lifecycle risk management. Daoud has analyzed enterprise IT trends since the late 1990s and was among the first analysts to examine ITAD as a distinct market segment during his time at IDC. He advises operators, OEMs, and investment teams on regulatory, technology, and market developments affecting the electronics lifecycle.

Related Posts

NERC: Blended average prices fell 40% in third quarter

HDPE, PP bales rise as paper fiber and cans stabilize

byRecyclingMarkets.net Staff
February 12, 2026

National average prices of post-consumer material bales were flat to higher on the month.

Terex beats ESG integration targets as REV group merger closes

byStefanie Valentic
February 11, 2026

Terex exceeded $25 million in ESG integration synergy targets and completed its REV Group merger, expanding its specialty equipment platform...

Packaging Corp. to buy Greif containerboard segment

Export trends offset containerboard production decline

byStefanie Valentic
February 6, 2026

AF&PA reported a 4% decline in containerboard production for 2025, while packaging paper shipments rose 2% in December and boxboard...

States push recycling reform forward in new year

byStefanie Valentic
February 2, 2026

New Jersey just passed a bill restricting single-use plastic items, California has opened another round of public comment on SB...

WM: Upgrades temporarily slow tons recovered

WM sees ‘notable growth’ despite low recycling commodity prices

byStefanie Valentic
January 30, 2026

WM has battled headwinds from low recycling commodity prices with strategic automation and facility upgrades, the company told investors in...

New entrepreneurs bring renewed energy to e-cycling

Europe pulls ahead on ITAD now while US growth remains slower

byDavid Daoud
January 28, 2026

Early 2026 shows Europe accelerating IT asset disposition investment through facilities, acquisitions and regulation, while US ITAD growth continues in...

Load More
Next Post
CMR, Paladin form REcapture to expand rare earth recovery

CMR, Paladin form REcapture to expand rare earth recovery

More Posts

Oregon’s Recycling Modernization Act faces injunction

Court partially blocks Oregon EPR law, dismisses bulk of lawsuit

February 10, 2026
Chinese processing group details goals for US visit

AMP lays out vision of next-generation, AI-driven MRFs

July 24, 2024
Malaysia clamps down on illegal e-waste imports amid probes

Malaysia clamps down on illegal e-waste imports amid probes

February 6, 2026

REUSE Act heads to US House for consideration

February 9, 2026

ecoATM recycled 7.5M phones in 2025 as payouts hit $1.5B

February 10, 2026
Meta-Corning deal signals IT hardware retirement wave

Meta-Corning deal signals IT hardware retirement wave

February 9, 2026

APR, industry create proactive guidance for PET caps

February 12, 2026
Texas sues over dumped wind turbine blades

Texas sues over dumped wind turbine blades

February 10, 2026

Alpek talks PET overcapacity, soft demand

February 11, 2026
The electronics recycling industry is undergoing a transformation from labor-intensive manual operations to highly automated, AI-driven facilities that use advanced robotics, cleaner chemistry and digital tracking systems to extract critical materials.

The cyber-physical MRF: AI and robotics reshape e-waste recovery

February 12, 2026
Load More

About & Publications

About Us

Staff

Archive

Magazine

Work With Us

Advertise
Jobs
Contact
Terms and Privacy

Newsletter

Get the latest recycling news and analysis delivered to your inbox every week. Stay ahead on industry trends, policy updates, and insights from programs, processors, and innovators.

Subscribe

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Add New Playlist

No Result
View All Result
  • The Latest
  • Analysis
  • Recycling
  • E-Scrap
  • Plastics
  • Policy Now
  • Conferences
    • E-Scrap Conference
    • Plastics Recycling Conference
    • Resource Recycling Conference
    • Textiles Recovery Summit
  • Magazine
  • About Us
  • Advertise
  • Archive
  • Jobs
  • Staff
Subscribe
This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.