Q1 2026 earnings season: What traders are watching

The S&P 500 has clawed back to within reach of its pre-war highs. The Nasdaq has posted nine consecutive daily gains. Goldman Sachs just delivered one of its strongest quarters on record. On the surface, Q1 2026 earnings season reads as a story of corporate resilience. The contradiction is that every one of those results landed into a market where oil is trading above $100, headline inflation re-accelerated to 3.3% in March, the Federal Reserve is on hold, and a US naval blockade of Iranian ports was ordered on 13 April. The question traders are navigating is not whether Q1 numbers were good — early indications suggest they were — but whether company guidance can hold up under conditions that no forecast model anticipated three months ago.
US earnings season for Q1 2026 is running on its standard schedule. Banks report first, followed by technology and semiconductors mid-week, then big tech in the final week of April. Here is the reporting cadence traders are tracking:
Financials: What the bank results actually signal
Goldman Sachs opened the season on 13 April with earnings per share of $17.55 against a consensus of $16.47, on revenue of $17.23 billion. Equities trading revenue reached $5.33 billion — a record for the firm — driven by prime brokerage activity and elevated market volatility. Investment banking fees surged 48% year-over-year. By headline metrics, the quarter was strong. Yet the stock fell on the day, a reminder that in this earnings season the beat matters less than the guidance and the macro context it arrives in.
The more consequential bank read comes from JPMorgan Chase, Wells Fargo, and Citigroup, all reporting 14 April. JPMorgan's results carry the most interpretive weight. CEO Jamie Dimon's commentary on consumer health, credit conditions, and the economic outlook functions as a de facto proxy for the Wall Street read on the US economy. On the earnings call, JPMorgan pointed to low‑single‑digit growth in discretionary card spending year-to-date — the consumer is intact, but not accelerating. Options markets were pricing a clearly larger‑than‑usual move in JPMorgan shares into earnings, reflecting the degree of uncertainty around both the results and the macro commentary.
The signal traders should watch beyond the headline beat: loan loss provisions and net interest income guidance for the second half. With the 10-year Treasury yield near 4.30% — above where most bank models assumed rates would be by mid-2026 — net interest margins remain elevated. But if bank CEOs signal deteriorating credit quality or pull NII guidance for H2, it would suggest the weight of persistent inflation and elevated energy costs is beginning to reach the consumer balance sheet.
Technology and semiconductors: The AI capex stress test
TSMC reports Thursday 16 April, and its call is the most consequential single data point of the week for technology traders. The top line is already known — the company disclosed Q1 revenue of $35.71 billion, up 35% year-over-year, beating the top end of its guided range. What the market does not yet know is whether management will maintain, raise, or trim the US$52–56 billion capital expenditure range it has outlined for 2026 — a scale of spending that underpins much of the current AI infrastructure build-out narrative across Nasdaq-listed names.
The underlying concern some strategists have raised is straightforward. Analysts project that the four major US hyperscalers — Microsoft, Alphabet, Amazon, and Meta — could collectively spend around US$635–665 billion on AI infrastructure in 2026, nearly double their estimated 2025 outlays. Several of those forecasts also point to meaningful free cash flow compression as a consequence of that capex surge. If any of them signals a capex pause or reduction when they report in late April, TSMC's demand outlook changes — and so does the valuation case for the Nasdaq 100, which has been trading above its 200-day moving average near 24,400 on the assumption that AI revenue will eventually justify the spend.
Netflix reports the same day, after the US market close. The company has guided to Q1 revenue of roughly US$12.2 billion, about 15% year-over-year growth, with Street forecasts putting operating margins in the high‑20s. The key variable is the ad-supported tier, which some analyst estimates suggest now accounts for roughly 30% of new sign‑ups and could roughly double its revenue contribution over the course of 2026 if current trends hold. If ad revenue momentum shows signs of slowing, it would be an early warning signal ahead of Meta and Alphabet — both heavily dependent on digital advertising — reporting the following week.
Cross-asset context: How earnings interact with the macro environment
Earnings season does not exist in isolation. The multi-asset landscape surrounding it is shaping how results are being interpreted in real time.
The dollar index has pulled back from its 2026 peak but remains above 98, supported by safe-haven demand from the Iran conflict and the rate differential created by the Fed's pause at 3.50–3.75%. A strong earnings season that reinforces US growth outperformance may push the dollar higher — which would apply pressure to commodities priced in USD. Gold has already fallen more than 10% from its January peak in the mid‑US$4,000s per ounce, a counterintuitive move during a geopolitical conflict explained by the inflation channel: oil above US$100 drives real yield expectations higher and strengthens the dollar, both of which work against gold.
The 10-year Treasury yield near 4.30% is the variable with the widest cross-asset reach. If big tech guidance in late April suggests AI revenue is beginning to materialise at scale — validating the capex cycle — it could prompt a reassessment of both growth and inflation expectations simultaneously, pushing yields higher and compressing growth equity valuations. Conversely, if guidance is cautious or withdrawn, the market may begin pricing a sharper growth slowdown, which would support Treasuries and weigh on the dollar.
What remains unresolved
Analysts estimated S&P 500 earnings growth of approximately 13% for Q1 2026 heading into this season. If early beat patterns hold — with roughly 73% of early reporters clearing estimates — some strategists see a path for actual growth to finish closer to the high‑teens, potentially around 19–20%. That would be a meaningful positive for equity sentiment. But strong Q1 numbers do not resolve the Iran conflict, reset oil prices, or clarify the tariff trajectory. Several consumer-facing companies have already signalled difficulty providing reliable forward guidance, citing tariff volatility and energy cost uncertainty. If that pattern spreads to large-cap technology in late April, it would weigh on equity markets regardless of what the Q1 numbers ultimately show.
Tesla on approximately 20 April and the big tech cohort from 28 April will determine whether the current equity rally is justified by fundamentals or running ahead of them.
The performance figures quoted refer to the past, and past performance is not a guarantee of future performance or a reliable guide to future performance.