What you are seeing has to do with operator precedence in VBA.
In VBA, exponentiation has a higher precedence than does negation. So in your first equation, the exponentiation operation occurs first, and then the result is negated.
Actually, it seems the Power function is smarter than the exponentiation operator. In point of fact, you are trying to take the fifth root of a negative number, which would be a real number. The Power function recognizes that. The exponentiation operator does not.
EDIT: From VBA Help for the ^: Remarks A number
can be negative only if exponent
is an integer value.
So it seems that the explanation for the behavior difference is, indeed, operator precedence, and a limitation of the VBA ^
operator.