Earnings season kicks off and a wave of inflation data: What to watch this week
Jake Conley· Breaking Business News Reporter
Sun, July 12, 2026 at 7:46 PM GMT+5:30
7 min read
Coming off a relatively staid past week in the markets, investors step into a packed five-day stretch as second quarter earnings kick off in force, with a healthy selection of economic data releases on the calendar to boot
S&P 500 (^GSPC) closed out Friday up 0.4% for a gain of 1.2% on the week. The Dow gained 0.3% on Friday but still closed the week on a loss of 0.5%. The Nasdaq picked up 0.3% on Friday to close the week up 1.7%
After a slow trickle of mostly minor earnings reports throughout the last month, the big banks unofficially kick off the earnings season this week
JPMorgan Chase (JPM), Goldman Sachs (GS), Bank of America (BAC), Wells Fargo (WFC), and Citibank (C) all report on Tuesday, followed by Morgan Stanley (MS) and fellow financial services giant BlackRock (BLK) on Wednesday
Other names to watch include pharmaceutical leader Johnson & Johnson (JNJ), industrial giant Kinder Morgan (KMI), and airline leader United Airlines (UAL) on Wednesday, followed by AI bellwether Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSM), tech bastion Netflix (NFLX), and healthcare leader UnitedHealth (UNH) on Thursday
On the economic data front, Consumer Price Index data on Tuesday and Producer Price Index data on Wednesday are set to give investors a slate of readings on the state of US inflation, and the University of Michigan’s bimonthly vibe check on consumer sentiment comes out Friday
Investors really want to see the money
After a blowout first quarter earnings season that exceeded expectations throughout Wall Street and Main Street alike, investors are looking for another standout set of results — and a return on the AI investment
This means a high bar to clear for Q2
LPL Financial’s chief equity strategist Jeffrey Buchbinder noted that margins will be “key to potentially keeping up this torrid pace of earnings growth as corporate America seeks out AI productivity gains.”
Margins need to expand “enough to convert low-teens revenue growth into at least double that pace of earnings growth,” Buchbinder wrote, adding that this means the AI trade will have to do a lot of “heavy lifting.”
Specifically, Buchbinder said chip <a href="https://todaytrendnews7.com/us-politicians-and-foreign-leaders-pay-tribute-to-lindsey-graham/” title=”US politicians and foreign leaders pay tribute to Lindsey Graham”>leaders Micron and Nvidia are expected to drive 40% of overall S&P 500 earnings growth, while AI infrastructure stocks are expected to contribute roughly 60%. And outside of the wider tech sector, only energy is expected to contribute more than one point of EPS growth
The first test for the S&P 500, however, will be the financial services sector, with banks expected to put another set of booming earnings on the back of a mega year for IPOs and trading volumes

