This earnings season, the numbers matter. Here’s your guide to Q2 2026.
With the S&P 500 supported by strong earnings expectations, artificial intelligence (AI) infrastructure spending and mega-cap technology momentum, traders are watching more than the headline result. The key signals come from guidance, margins, capital expenditure (capex) and the market reaction after results land.
Use this guide to follow the themes, companies and cross-market signals shaping the reporting season.
Start here, choose your earnings lens
Not every trader watches earnings the same way. Before opening the calendar, choose the lens that best matches what you are tracking.
Tech momentum
Watch AI chips, cloud revenue, capex and guidance from the largest technology names.
Macro signals
Watch banks, consumer companies, margins, credit quality and management commentary on demand.
Volatility lens
Watch after-hours moves, guidance surprises, sector rotation and whether earnings reactions hold into the next session.
ASX spillover leads
Watch how US results affect Nasdaq 100 futures, the S&P 500, the US dollar, yields, gold, oil and the next ASX open.
The big picture
Earnings expectations are high.
According to FactSet, the S&P 500 is expected to report year-on-year (YoY) earnings growth of 23.3% for Q2 2026. If achieved, it would mark a second consecutive quarter of earnings growth above 20% for the index.
That puts pressure on companies to do more than beat estimates. They need to justify the expectations already reflected in prices.
- Are earnings growing fast enough to support valuations?
- Is AI spending translating into revenue and margins?
- Are banks seeing strength or stress in credit conditions?
- Is the US consumer still holding up?
- Are companies confident about the second half of 2026?
A strong result with cautious guidance can still pressure a stock. A softer headline result with better forward commentary may still support sentiment.
That is why earnings season is not only about the numbers. It is about the reaction.
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The companies traders are watching
The focus is not only on the biggest names in US markets. It is on the companies that help shape expectations across finance, AI, energy demand, consumer spending and the economic cycle.
To keep the watchlist clear, the companies the GO Markets Editorial Desk will be tracking are grouped into four themes.
Banking and finance
Banks can set the early tone for earnings season. Their results give traders a read on credit conditions, consumer resilience, deal activity and the strength of financial markets.
Key areas include net interest margins, loan-loss provisions, lending demand, credit card trends, trading revenue and investment banking activity.
net interest income, investment banking pipelines, trading activity, credit reserves and consumer lending trends.
consumer lending, deposit trends, loan-loss provisions, credit card activity and sensitivity to interest rate expectations.
restructuring progress, institutional client activity, transaction services, global exposure and capital discipline.
Key question: Are major banks showing resilience, or are credit risks starting to build?
Oil, AI demand and the physical economy cycle
Energy and physical infrastructure companies provide a different read on market conditions. Their results show how commodity prices, power demand, industrial activity and capex are flowing through the real economy.
Key areas include production costs, energy demand, infrastructure spending, order backlogs, cash flow and margins.
automotive gross margins, delivery trends, production execution, energy storage growth, AI investment and commentary on future demand.
renewable energy capacity, grid investment, contracted project backlog, electricity demand and infrastructure development.
upstream production, refining margins, commodity price sensitivity, capital discipline and cash flow conversion.
Key question: Are energy and transport-linked companies confirming demand strength, or showing signs of pressure?
AI infrastructure
AI infrastructure remains one of the most watched themes in US markets. The central question is whether demand for chips, cloud capacity and data centre infrastructure is still supporting earnings momentum.
Key areas include AI chip demand, cloud revenue, data centre orders, supply conditions, gross margins, capex and forward guidance.
cloud revenue, AI infrastructure investment, enterprise software demand, Azure growth and capex.
cloud revenue, AI monetisation, advertising demand, infrastructure spending and operating margins.
AI chip demand, data centre revenue, next-generation architecture pipelines, supply conditions and gross margin sustainability.
Key question: Is AI infrastructure demand still accelerating, or are markets looking for stronger proof of returns?
AI return on investment and consumer integration
This group sits at the intersection of AI investment, consumer behaviour and platform monetisation. Their results show whether AI spending is moving from infrastructure build-out into commercial use cases.
Key areas include advertising demand, user growth, AI product integration, cloud demand, consumer spending, margins and free cash flow.
advertising revenue, AI-driven engagement, operating efficiency, capex and monetisation across platforms.
cloud demand, retail margins, advertising growth, logistics efficiency, consumer spending and AI-related investment.
iPhone demand, hardware upgrade cycles, services revenue, consumer spending patterns and AI integration across devices.
Key question: Are major consumer and platform companies turning AI investment into measurable business growth?
Where earnings can move markets
Growth and technology sentiment
Big Tech, AI and semiconductor earnings can drive the Nasdaq 100 and shape broader risk appetite. Guidance matters most when it changes expectations for AI demand, cloud revenue, chip orders or data centre spending.
Market breadth and leadership
Earnings also show whether market strength is narrow or broadening. The S&P 500 gives traders a wider read on earnings momentum, while the Dow Jones can help track leadership across banks, industrials, healthcare and defensives.
Macro flow-through
Major earnings surprises can spill into currencies, bonds and commodities. The US dollar is sensitive to risk sentiment, rate expectations and safe-haven demand. Yields can move on company commentary around inflation, wages, margins and demand. Gold typically reacts to the US dollar, yields and defensive positioning. Oil is more exposed to energy results, demand commentary and geopolitical risk.
ASX flow-through
For Australian traders, US earnings can set the tone before the local open. Technology, energy, materials and financials may react to overnight moves, depending on which companies report and whether sentiment carries through to Asia-Pacific trade.
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Bottom line
Earnings beats matter, but the market is looking beyond the headline number.
For traders, the bigger test is whether AI spending, Big Tech margins, bank commentary, consumer demand and second-half guidance can keep supporting expectations already priced into markets.
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