Published May 8, 2026

Below we offer Schwab’s analysis of the first quarter earnings. The rise in earnings and earnings expectations has driven the sharp rebound in stocks over the past few weeks.
Here’s what Schwab sees:
“With a meaningful portion of the S&P 500 having reported first quarter 2026 earnings, the growth rate is tracking at nearly 28% year over year, which is nearly double the consensus that prevailed at the start of this year. That 13-plus percentage point upward revision is one of the more pronounced positive intra-quarter upgrades in recent cycles and reflects a combination of genuine outperformance—particularly in the Technology and Communication Services sectors—as well as a base period that was softer in some cyclical pockets of the market, like the Materials sector.
So far during this reporting season, both the earnings and revenues beat rates have moved higher and are tracking well above historical medians. Absent a significant shift in the macro landscape, it’s expected that earnings growth can remain strong in the second quarter.
As shown below, the first quarter (1Q26) column is a sea of green, other than for the Health Care and Energy sectors. Though in the case of the latter, a massive acceleration is on tap for the remaining quarters of the year, in part courtesy of the Iran war-related spike in oil prices.

The sector-level data for the first quarter of 2026 reveals some concentration in terms of upward revision drivers. Consumer Discretionary’s estimate jumped to 38%, largely reflecting tariff pull-forward dynamics and specific large cap contributions, notably from Amazon. Communication Services saw a similarly dramatic re-rating, with the first quarter estimate jumping to 52%, largely driven by Alphabet.

The estimate now sits at nearly 23% for the full calendar year 2026, up from less than 16% at the January 1 consensus, driven disproportionately by a handful of high-momentum sectors (and individual stocks) rather than broad-based upward revisions. Only the Energy sector has notable breadth in terms of the stocks contributing to rising earnings expectations. The other three top sectors have much more concentration: Alphabet is the biggest driver of the upward trajectory of estimates for Communication Services. Tech’s outsized earnings growth expectation is somewhat concentrated among Sandisk, Micron, Intel, and Broadcom. And in the case of Materials, the top drivers are Dow and Albermarle.

Mag7 convergence?
Another way to slice and dice the S&P 500 is to compare the earnings growth rates of the Magnificent 7 (Mag7) cohort (Alphabet, Amazon, Apple, Meta, Microsoft, Nvidia, and Tesla) and the ex-Mag7 (the other 493). According to the London Stock Exchange Group’s Institutional Brokers’ Estimate System (LSEG I/B/E/S), the Mag7 cohort is estimated to grow earnings by nearly 60% in the first quarter of 2026, extending a run that has ranged in percentage terms from the high teens to the low 60s since mid-2023. The other 493 is tracking closer to 19%—a historically solid reading, but the gap remains wide.

The expected “convergence trade”—when the broader market’s earnings growth catches up to mega-cap AI beneficiaries—has been repeatedly pushed out. For calendar year 2026, estimates suggest Mag7 earnings growth of about 30% versus about 20% for the other 493. However, note that it’s expected that the other 493’s earnings growth rate may actually exceed the Mag7’s in the fourth quarter of 2026.
Don’t miss it!
One of the most notable signals from first quarter 2026 earnings is the severity of the miss penalty. The average excess return (on the first trading day after an earnings release) for a company that has beaten estimates is running around 0.7% relative to the S&P 500, which is roughly in line with historical norms. On the other hand, companies that miss have seen stocks’ average excess returns of around -3.9%, which is the most severe punishment since the second quarter of 2025’s extreme -5.8% reading and at the low end of the -2.0% to -4.0% range that prevailed through much of 2022-2024.

This asymmetry has two interpretations. The charitable read: the market is efficiently repricing companies that fail to deliver in an environment where expectations are elevated and macro uncertainty (war, tariffs, Federal Reserve policy, etc.) is high. The less charitable read: it signals fragility—investor positioning is stretched on the long side in high-expectation names, and the air pocket on a miss is wider than the reward for confirmation. That dynamic is worth monitoring as we move through the latter stage of reporting season, particularly for mega-cap names where consensus has been repeatedly upgraded.
By a wide margin
It’s not just profits that are in focus, but profit margins as well. According to Bloomberg, S&P 500 net profit margins are tracking near 12%—which is close to the post-pandemic expansion highs and well above the 7-8% range that characterized most of the 2010s. The elevated margin structure is a key support for the earnings growth story—but it also represents a vulnerability. In a somewhat-stagflationary environment where input cost pressures are rising while revenue growth may decelerate alongside slowing economic growth, concerns about margin compression are rising.

The 1999-2000 spike in margins was followed by a sharp contraction as the dot-com cycle turned, while the Global Financial Crisis trough touched below 3.5%. Today’s margins, which are near the highest in the 35-year series, means that even modest margin compression would represent a meaningful headwind to earnings growth. That’s not our base case, but it does represent a risk for the market. Margins near historical highs are a double-edged sword. They reflect the index’s increasingly software-and-platform-heavy composition, which are structurally higher margin businesses, but they also leave less cushion if cost pressures accelerate.
Rotations abound
The trailing 12-month sector leaderboard through the end of April shows Communication Services, Tech, and Energy as the clear performance standouts—exactly the sectors in which earnings revisions have been strongest. Health Care and Consumer Staples sit at the bottom—exactly the sectors in which earnings revisions have been most negative. Notable however, is how rotational the market has been on a month-to-month basis, with sectors like Communication Services and Tech jumping all over the leaderboard.

The sector “quilt” confirms that the market has been appropriately pricing sector-level earnings differentiation, but also that the gap between winners and laggards is historically wide, raising rebalancing and mean-reversion risk.
In sum
Earnings have been strong, with double-digit growth across most sectors, a substantial upward revision to the consensus since January, margins holding near cyclical highs, and the Mag7 delivering another quarter of outsized AI-monetization gains. This is validation, for now, that the economic cycle remains intact despite macro headwinds.
The current near-23% full-year S&P 500 earnings estimate remains ambitious against the backdrop of below-trend economic growth and above-target inflation. It’s a combination that has historically created a difficult operating environment for profit margins. In short: the scorecard looks good. But the field conditions for the next few quarters are more challenging than the first quarter 2026’s results alone would suggest.
Market Update
Stocks closed slightly lower Monday as tensions in the Strait of Hormuz kept investors a little cautious. The Dow Industrials underperformed with a -1% loss. But that loss was reversed Tuesday when the Trump Administration offered to shepherd tankers through the Strait to improve the flow of oil. Several technology stocks posted double-digit gains ahead of some earnings reports as the AI trade has been rekindled. A report suggesting the War with Iran might be nearing a peace deal sent stocks strongly upward Wednesday. Oil prices tumbled -7% paving the way for a full risk-on trading day. Chipmaker AMD posted strong earnings results to send that company’s stock +19% higher. Fellow tech-related companies Corning and Super Micro also saw massive gains on earnings. The Nasdaq shot higher by +2%. Markets saw a slight pause Thursday on a lack of further positive news out of Iran. But stocks resumed their climb Friday with semiconductors once again surging upward. News of a deal between Apple and chipmaker Intel added fuel to the rampant demand for semiconductor shares. The Nasdaq rose more than +2% while other indexes posted a less than +1% lift. For the week, chipmakers AMD and Intel both saw gains of +25% while memory chip company Micron gained almost +40% in an incredible move.
Stocks posted another strong week with semiconductors leading the way to solid gains in the indexes. The S&P 500 rose +2.35%. The Nasdaq 100 (QQQ) blasted higher by +5.50%. Small cap stocks added +1.75%.
Warm wishes and until next week.