Earnings Strength Takes Center Stage as the Busiest Week of the Q1 Season Arrives

Key Takeaways

  • This week marks the busiest of the Q1 2026 earnings season with 3,213 companies expected to report.
  • The S&P 500® is projected to deliver its sixth consecutive quarter of double-digit earnings growth at 15.1%, fueled largely by a powerhouse 46% expansion in the Information Technology sector.
  • Potential earnings surprises this week: Kraft Heinz Company, Gilead Sciences and McDonald’s

Tech’s Double-Edged Sword: Massive Growth Meets Staggering AI Infrastructure Costs

Last week, five of the Magnificent Seven, Amazon (AMZN), Meta Platforms (META), Alphabet (GOOGL), Microsoft (MSFT), and Apple (AAPL) reported Q1 2026 earnings, painting a complex picture of a sector where massive AI-driven revenue gains are increasingly tempered by the staggering costs required to build that future.

Read more: Robust 2026-2027 Earnings Growth is a Live Probability

Generally, all five companies posted strong top-line revenue growth that largely exceeded analyst expectations, with cloud computing emerging as the primary engine of success for Amazon1, Microsoft2, and Alphabet3. However, investor reaction was sharply divided based on capital expenditure guidance; Alphabet surged following its results, while Meta and others faced pressure as markets scrutinized the aggressive, upward-revised spending plans on data centers, chips, and infrastructure.4

Apple rounded out the week on Thursday, crushing Wall Street expectations with $111.2 billion in revenue, driven by record-breaking demand for the iPhone 17 lineup. Investors reacted positively, sending the company's stock up 5% in after-hours trading, marking a high-note performance as Tim Cook navigates one of his final earnings calls before transitioning to the role of Executive Chairman in September.5

Including these results, 63% of S&P 500 companies have now reported for the Q1 2026 season. The EPS growth rate increased to 27.1% from 15.1% in the week prior, and revenues increased to 11.1% from 10.3%.6