Strong Earnings Season Complete! Where Will the Market Focus Now?

  • Equities have rallied through a strong earnings season. Markets are now likely to focus on artificial intelligence (AI) capital expenditures, the returns companies are generating on those investments and whether upcoming initial public offerings (IPOs) from SpaceX, OpenAI and Anthropic reinforce the narrative.
  • New Federal Reserve (Fed) Chair Kevin Warsh will be watched for any shift in policy direction.

Macro

  • Our real gross domestic product growth forecast for 2026 is 2.5% (based on Franklin Templeton Institute’s Global Investment Management Survey), versus the Fed’s forecast of 2.3% and the Wall Street consensus of around 2%. The main drivers for growth this year will likely be a resilient consumer, fiscal stimulus resulting from the One Big Beautiful Bill Act and strong business investment fueled by the AI buildout.
  • Revised data released Thursday showed the US economy grew at a 1.6% pace in the first quarter of 2026, led by business investment and consumer spending.
  • New Fed Chair Kevin Warsh faces a difficult backdrop of elevated inflation. Thursday’s April Personal Consumption Expenditure (PCE) inflation report showed that PCE grew 3.8%, and the core rate, excluding food and energy prices, grew 3.3%. Both were in line with estimates but higher than in March.
  • Fed funds futures indicate the next Fed move could be an interest-rate hike in 2027. Prior to the US-Iran war, the futures market priced in two cuts. Our base case remains that the Fed stays on hold in the near term. That could change, especially if the conflict in the Middle East escalates or drags on.
  • Inflation expectations have continued to ease since the end of March. One-year break-even rates have risen to 2.67%, two-year rates to 2.62%, and 10-year rates to 2.40%. All have moved less than five basis points over the past week.
  • The labor market remains healthy, though not especially dynamic. The most recent weekly jobless claims data came in at 215,000, slightly above expectations, and the four-week moving average was 209,000.
  • After 90 days of conflict with Iran, oil prices remain elevated. Brent crude is trading around US$95, off its US$115 high but about 35% above its pre-US-Iran war level. If prices move higher or stay high through the rest of the year, the risk to global growth will become more pronounced.