Wall Street futures edged higher Monday as the S&P 500 enters the first wave of Q2 earnings reports expected to show 23.1% year-on-year profit growth.
"We have looked around and seen that prices are too high," Federal Reserve Chair Kevin Warsh said at the ECB Forum in Sintra on July 1, as the central bank balances strong corporate earnings against inflation running at 3.6%.
FactSet's consensus estimate puts S&P 500 earnings growth at 23.1% for the second quarter, with Goldman Sachs strategists projecting 22% EPS growth. The figures would mark the second consecutive quarter of earnings expansion, with FactSet estimating full-year 2026 growth of 24%. Goldman raised its year-end S&P 500 target to 8,000 from 7,600 in May on the back of the profit outlook.
The earnings season runs parallel to the release of the Fed's June 17 meeting minutes on Wednesday, where the central bank held rates at 3.5% to 3.75%. Nine of 18 officials penciled in at least one rate hike for 2026, and investors will scrutinize the minutes for any shift in the committee's inflation outlook. The Dow Jones Industrial Average closed at a record 52,900 last week, while the S&P 500 settled at 7,483 and the Nasdaq slipped 0.8% as semiconductor stocks faced renewed pressure.
Delta Air Lines reports Thursday before the open, with analysts expecting $17.5 billion in revenue and $1.49 in earnings per share — a test of whether premium travel demand can sustain the airline's momentum after a first-quarter beat. Delta posted $0.64 per share against a $0.61 consensus in Q1 on $14.20 billion in revenue. The airline sector serves as a proxy for consumer spending, with Delta's premium cabin revenue — which carries two to three times the margin of basic economy — offering a read on whether households are still prioritizing experiences over goods.
The divergence between a blue-chip Dow at record levels and a Nasdaq struggling with AI trade jitters captures the tension heading into the second half. Strong earnings could validate the bull case for equities, while any misses — particularly in the technology sector — risk accelerating the rotation out of high-multiple names.
The next two weeks will determine whether the S&P 500's valuation can support the 24% full-year earnings growth baked into analyst estimates. Investors will watch Delta's Thursday call for consumer spending signals, and the Fed minutes on Wednesday for any hawkish shift that could pressure equity multiples.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.