Vee Leung Phan ( @TrackRecordAsia ) is the Founder of TrackRecord Asia and former Head of Trading across multiple divisions for Deutsche Bank and Morgan Stanley. TrackRecord Asia is a financial training academy for trading teams in banks and professional traders – designed to teach you the frameworks learnt in his days across first-class institutions. In this follow-up episode from Season 1, we covered: TrackRecord Asia Philosophy & Risk management His approach to trading Global state of affairs Hong Kong protests & China
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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.
Don’t miss what other traders are watching.
Get ahead with GO Markets by tracking the
reports, events and live signals that matter this season.
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.

The US economy enters July navigating a transitional macro landscape under a revised Federal Reserve policy framework. Market participant attention remains focused on persistent inflation, trade tariff uncertainty under Section 122 provisions and structural adjustments introduced by new leadership at the central bank.
Macro context
The Federal Reserve maintains its target range for the federal funds rate at 3.50% to 3.75%. Following the June meeting, new Fed Chair Kevin Warsh modified central bank communications by removing traditional forward guidance in favour of pure data dependence.
Inflation remains a key focus. The all items Consumer Price Index (CPI) increased 4.2% over the year to May 2026, marking the largest 12-month increase since April 2023. Brent crude has since retreated to the low US$70s per barrel as at 1 July 2026, after recent easing in Strait of Hormuz shipping disruptions.
Geopolitical risk remains a potential source of renewed volatility, but the current oil price backdrop does not support describing Brent as above US$100. Market participants enter July assessing whether softer economic data could justify interest rate reductions later in the year, or whether sticky services inflation and tariff-related cost pressures may require a restrictive stance for longer.
3.50% to 3.75%
Current operational baseline
28 to 29 July 2026
Policy decision window
Low US$70s / bbl
As at 1 July 2026
5 major releases
High importance indicators
Growth, business activity and demand
Economic activity indicators continue to show a divergent picture across sectors. Real gross domestic product (GDP) increased at an annualised rate of 2.1% in the first quarter of 2026, according to the third estimate from the US Bureau of Economic Analysis.
While the headline figure points to continued expansion, secondary market indicators continue to suggest pressure on corporate margins. Increased overheads from trade tariffs and structural transport bottlenecks may be affecting forward-looking factory order books as corporate expansion cools.
- The June manufacturing PMI, which printed at 53.3%, down from 54.0% in May.
- Service sector business activity prints as an indicator of broader private consumption stability.
- Capital goods orders excluding defence and aircraft, which may help measure underlying corporate capital investment.
- Changes in corporate inventory accumulation patterns amid evolving global supply chain conditions.
- The Q2 advance GDP estimate, released on the same day as the June PCE data.
Firm or accelerating activity data may drive US Treasury yields and the US dollar higher, which could weigh on equities through valuation compression. Conversely, softer growth prints may reduce interest rate expectations and weaken the US dollar, potentially supporting major equity indices.
Labour, payrolls and employment data
The domestic employment sector remains balanced within a low-hire, low-fire structural state. Higher net financing expenses are gradually cooling corporate recruitment pipelines, keeping payroll expansions within a contained band.
- Headline NFP net additions tracking near the 100,000 to 150,000 range, which may confirm moderated growth.
- The unemployment rate remaining steady within its established 4.3% to 4.5% structural channel.
- Revisions to prior months’ aggregate statistics, which may change perceived employment momentum.
- Average hourly earnings growth rates as a key indicator of domestic wage-push inflation risks.
Under the revised Warsh policy framework, the central bank has minimised its emphasis on employment-driven forward modelling. If employment indicators weaken significantly while CPI prints remain high, the central bank may prioritise price stability over labour market support. This could alter some traditional defensive trading assumptions.
A stronger-than-expected NFP result may drive Treasury yields and the US dollar higher, which could cap equity market valuation multiples as rate cut timing shifts outward. A weaker-than-expected employment print may reduce the US dollar, lower yields and support interest-rate-sensitive assets such as gold.
Inflation, CPI, PPI and PCE
Inflation trends remain a primary source of volatility across financial markets. Energy costs, secondary passthrough from recent tariffs and sticky core services pricing continue to test the central bank’s mandate.
- The monthly PCE core deflator as a key metric for policy assessment.
- Wholesale price changes within PPI to identify margin pressure on consumer goods.
- Second-round inflation effects from elevated maritime freight and fuel costs on core services.
- Measures of consumer inflation expectations to assess whether longer-term targets remain anchored.
Cooling inflation data may lower Treasury yields, weaken the US dollar and provide support to gold and stock indices. Sticky or accelerating monthly prints could reinforce higher-for-longer rate assumptions, lifting the US dollar while pressuring corporate debt markets.
Policy, trade and geopolitics
Trade policy frameworks continue to create uncertainty for corporate supply chains. The temporary 10% blanket tariff authorised under Section 122 of the Trade Act of 1974 faces a scheduled expiry on 24 July.
The tariff outlook is also subject to legal uncertainty. On 7 May 2026, the US Court of International Trade ruled that the administration exceeded its authority in imposing the Section 122 surcharge. The ruling does not automatically remove tariff exposure for all importers while the matter proceeds through appeal, but it adds legal risk to the scheduled expiry or replacement point.
Market participants are assessing whether these short-term surcharges may end, be replaced or transition into another policy framework. Any change could materially affect corporate input cost models, supply chain planning and margin expectations.
Key watchlist summary
Top data point
June CPI on 14 July at 8:30 am ET | 10:30 pm AEST
Top risk event
Expiry, replacement or legal challenge pathway for Section 122 tariffs on 24 July
Wildcard
Geopolitical transit safety developments inside the Strait of Hormuz
Earnings watch
Mid-month financial sector Q2 corporate updates
Key threshold
The US 10-year Treasury yield testing or holding near 4.5%
Next FOMC
28 to 29 July 2026 interest rate decision
Double data day
Q2 advance GDP and June PCE on 30 July
July refocuses the macroeconomic narrative on inflation metrics, trade policy risk and policy execution under a restructured Federal Reserve administration. The central bank remains focused on defending its price-stability mandate against complex external commodity and trade policy developments.
For market participants, direction may depend heavily on whether incoming data validates high interest rate settings or points to clearer signs of an economic slowdown.

China, Japan and Australia are all in focus as July brings fresh policy signals, inflation data and energy route risks.
The Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) left its cash rate target unchanged at 4.35% in June, while the Bank of Japan (BOJ) adjusted policy higher in June as inflation risks and Middle East-driven price pressures remained in focus. China’s push for technological self-reliance under the 15th Five-Year Plan continues to reshape regional commodity demand and trade flows.
For traders, the key question is how these regional drivers may flow through currencies, commodities, indices and risk sentiment in the weeks ahead.
15th Five-Year Plan
Industrial upgrading and domestic demand data
BOJ policy path
Yen volatility and July guidance
Inflation test
Monthly CPI and labour market data
Energy routes
Strait of Hormuz and imported fuel costs
China, industrial upgrading stays in focus
Chinese policymakers remain focused on the 15th Five-Year Plan, which runs from 2026 to 2030. The plan prioritises industrial upgrading, technological self-reliance and high-quality growth.
The key question for markets is whether China’s policy support can stabilise demand while the economy continues to shift away from the rapid expansion model of previous decades.
- Stability in the manufacturing purchasing managers’ index (PMI) after its recovery above the 50 threshold
- Growth in industrial production and retail sales, as domestic demand remains soft
- Progress on advanced semiconductor, biotech and quantum technology policy under the 15th Five-Year Plan
China’s push for technological self-reliance may alter the long-term demand structure for commodity-linked partners such as Australia. Shifts in Chinese industrial output can also influence regional trade flows and broader market sentiment, with potential implications for index CFDs across the region.
Japan, BOJ guidance takes centre stage
The Bank of Japan raised its policy rate by 25 basis points (bps) at its 15 and 16 June meeting, taking policy settings to their highest level since September 1995.
The yen remains sensitive to further policy and intervention signals, with USD/JPY trading around levels that have previously drawn attention from Japanese authorities. Markets are now watching whether the BOJ confirms a gradual tightening path or signals a more cautious approach.
- Forward guidance from Governor Kazuo Ueda on the pace of further rate normalisation
- Whether the BOJ signals scope for further tightening later in 2026
- Verbal intervention or direct action from the Ministry of Finance if yen moves become disorderly
The interest rate gap between Japan and other major advanced economies has narrowed, but it continues to influence carry trade activity. Any further hawkish shift from the BOJ, or renewed currency intervention from the Ministry of Finance, could increase volatility across yen-linked forex CFDs.
Australia, inflation remains the domestic test
Australia enters July with markets focused on whether inflation is proving sticky enough to keep the RBA cautious.
The RBA left the cash rate target unchanged at 4.35% at its 16 June meeting, after three earlier rate increases in 2026. The next RBA decision is due on 10 and 11 August.
- Whether monthly CPI continues to run above the RBA’s 2% to 3% target band
- Labour market resilience after this year’s cash rate increases
- Consumer spending after post-Budget cost-of-living relief
- Pass-through from fuel costs into transport and logistics margins
The 29 July CPI release remains a key domestic driver before the August RBA meeting. If inflation remains sticky, expectations for future rate cuts may fade further. That could support the Australian dollar (AUD), while adding pressure to ASX interest-rate-sensitive sectors such as banks, real estate investment trusts and consumer discretionary stocks.
ASEAN supply chain shifts: Manufacturing activity continues to shift across parts of ASEAN, including Vietnam and Thailand, as companies assess costs, logistics and trade routes.
Strait of Hormuz risk: The Strait of Hormuz remains a key risk for energy importers. Recent de-escalation has helped pull Brent crude lower, but shipping conditions remain sensitive to renewed disruption, security incidents or changes to transit arrangements. Any renewed pressure on the waterway could affect regional energy flows, freight costs and imported fuel prices.
Commodity-linked sentiment: Iron ore trading around the US$95 to US$105 range may continue to influence the AUD, particularly if China-linked demand signals shift. Brent crude has pulled back from earlier conflict-driven highs, with markets now watching whether prices stabilise near recent levels or reprice toward US$85 to US$100 per barrel if energy route risks return.
US macro spillovers: US personal consumption expenditures (PCE) trends remain important for global import demand, while upcoming US non-farm payrolls (NFP) data could influence expectations for Federal Reserve policy, the US dollar and broader risk appetite.
Key watchlist
Top China Data Point
Q2 GDP and June industrial production on 15 July
Top Japan Event
BOJ policy decision on 31 July
Top Australia Event
Monthly CPI indicator on 29 July
Main Regional Wildcard
Strait of Hormuz shipping conditions and energy route risk
Key Threshold
Whether Brent crude stabilises near recent levels or reprices toward US$85 to US$100 per barrel if energy route risks return
July begins with three policy stories pulling the region in different directions. China is leaning into industrial self-reliance. Japan is managing yen pressure after a June rate hike. Australia is testing whether inflation remains sticky enough to keep the RBA cautious.
For traders, the issue is not just which data point lands next. It is whether these regional pressures stay contained, or begin to reinforce each other through energy costs, currency volatility and trade-linked sentiment.

