2026headerearnings

Earnings season 2026 kicks off: banks show the mood, AI shows the bill

Equities 5 minutes to read
Ruben Dalfovo
Ruben Dalfovo

Investment Strategist

Key takeaways

  • Early bank earnings reveal confidence, credit health, and whether businesses and households still borrow willingly.

  • Early AI readouts reveal who pays for the buildout and who keeps the margins after the spending.

  • Treat earnings season as a direction finder, not a precision tool. Avoid overreacting to one quarter.


Earnings season is often sold like a sports scoreboard: beat or miss, win or lose. In real life, it is closer to a school report card. The grade matters, but the teacher’s comments tell you what happens next.

Banks: the economy’s mood ring

US bank results arrive first because banking is where today’s confidence meets tomorrow’s cash flow. If consumers and companies feel good, they borrow, spend, invest, and pay on time. If they feel uneasy, they delay projects, cut inventories, and protect cash.

When you listen to bank calls, focus on three plain signals.

First, loan demand. Are households still taking mortgages and car loans, and are businesses still funding expansion? Weak demand can mean caution, but it can also mean customers already have enough cash. The wording tells you which.

Second, credit quality. That is the polite phrase for “are people paying back what they borrowed?” Watch for language about delinquencies (late payments) and provisions, meaning money set aside for potential future losses. A small rise is normal. A sharp change in tone is the point.

Third, the mix of profits. Banks earn money from lending, but also from trading and dealmaking. Trading can jump around with markets. Lending tends to move with the real economy. If a bank beats expectations mainly because trading is strong, that is useful, but it is not the same as broad-based confidence.

One more thing: do not treat guidance like a promise. Treat it like management’s best attempt at honesty, under pressure, with a microphone on.

AI: where the money flows, and where it leaks

The AI story now shifts from “look what the software can do” to “who pays for the machines, the buildings, and the electricity.” This is where the invoice metaphor becomes real.

AI spending has several layers.

At the top sit the buyers of computing power, often large companies building AI features into products and services. Close behind are the platforms that host AI workloads in data centres. They fund much of the upfront spending.

Then come the suppliers. Chip designers and manufacturers sell the processors. Data centre builders sell concrete, cooling, and networking. Power producers and grid owners supply the electricity. Each layer wants a healthy margin, meaning profit after costs. Not everyone gets it at the same time.

Even if you never plan to own a chip stock, this matters because it is a real-world measure of demand. If orders for advanced chips stay strong, the AI buildout keeps moving. If the tone shifts towards caution, it can signal that customers are pausing, stretching delivery schedules, or pushing for better pricing.

For a long-term investor, the key is to separate excitement from economics. AI can be transformative and still be expensive. The market’s main question in 2026 is simple: does the spending convert into cash generation, or does it keep eating it? 

Connecting the dots: mood meets invoice

Here is the link between banks and AI.

If banks sound cautious, it usually means credit becomes more selective. When money is harder to get, expensive projects face tougher questions. That is when big AI budgets get scrutinised, not because AI stops being useful, but because funding stops being easy.

If banks describe healthy borrowers and stable credit, it gives management teams more room to keep investing. AI spending can keep running, especially for firms that treat it as essential, not optional.

This is why “beat or miss” headlines matter less than the story underneath. One quarter can be noisy. A shift in language across many companies is the signal.

Risks that can fool even careful listeners

The first risk is false certainty. A strong quarter can reflect timing, accounting, or one-off gains. A weak quarter can reflect temporary costs that later fade. If management leans heavily on “one-time” explanations, take notes and see if the pattern repeats.

The second risk is the funding squeeze showing up late. Credit problems often arrive after the economy slows, not on the same day it slows. Watch for rising provisions and more cautious language on consumer stress.

The third risk is AI cost creep. Data centres and power are physical constraints. If firms talk about higher build costs, longer timelines, or pressure on margins, the invoice is growing.

Investor playbook: what to listen for, what to ignore

  • Listen for changes in wording on loan demand and credit quality across several banks, not just one headline number.
  • Treat “capital expenditure” plans (money spent on long-term assets) as a trend story, not a single-quarter verdict.
  • Ignore the first wave of “beat or miss” hot takes. wait for repeat signals across multiple sectors.
  • If volatility rises, use it as a discipline test: position size, diversification, and time horizon matter more than speed.

Direction over precision

Earnings season is the market’s annual reminder that investing is not fortune-telling. It is pattern recognition with imperfect data. Banks help you read the mood because they sit in the middle of borrowing, spending, and risk. AI helps you read the bill because it shows where the economy chooses to invest real money, in real buildings, using real electricity.

If you remember one line, keep this: banks show the mood of the economy, AI shows the invoice. Your job is not to predict every number. Your job is to stay calm, track the direction, and avoid letting one noisy quarter push you off a sensible long-term plan.







This material is marketing content and should not be regarded as investment advice. Trading financial instruments carries risks and historic performance is not a guarantee of future results.

The instrument(s) referenced in this content may be issued by a partner, from whom Saxo receives promotional fees, payment or retrocessions. While Saxo may receive compensation from these partnerships, all content is created with the aim of providing clients with valuable information and options.

Outrageous Predictions 2026

01 /

  • Obesity drugs for everyone – even for pets

    Outrageous Predictions

    Obesity drugs for everyone – even for pets

    Jacob Falkencrone

    Global Head of Investment Strategy

    The availability of GLP-1 drugs in pill form makes them ubiquitous, shrinking waistlines, even for p...
  • Dumb AI triggers trillion-dollar clean-up

    Outrageous Predictions

    Dumb AI triggers trillion-dollar clean-up

    Jacob Falkencrone

    Global Head of Investment Strategy

    Agentic AI systems are deployed across all sectors, and after a solid start, mistakes trigger a tril...
  • Executive Summary: Outrageous Predictions 2026

    Outrageous Predictions

    Executive Summary: Outrageous Predictions 2026

    Saxo Group

    Read Saxo's Outrageous Predictions for 2026, our latest batch of low probability, but high impact ev...
  • Dollar dominance challenged by Beijing’s golden yuan

    Outrageous Predictions

    Dollar dominance challenged by Beijing’s golden yuan

    Charu Chanana

    Chief Investment Strategist

    Beijing does an end-run around the US dollar, setting up a framework for settling trade in a neutral...
  • SpaceX announces an IPO, supercharging extraterrestrial markets

    Outrageous Predictions

    SpaceX announces an IPO, supercharging extraterrestrial markets

    John J. Hardy

    Global Head of Macro Strategy

    Financial markets go into orbit, to the moon and beyond as SpaceX expands rocket launches by orders-...
  • Taylor Swift-Kelce wedding spikes global growth

    Outrageous Predictions

    Taylor Swift-Kelce wedding spikes global growth

    John J. Hardy

    Global Head of Macro Strategy

    Next year’s most anticipated wedding inspires Gen Z to drop the doomscrolling and dial up the real w...
  • Quantum leap Q-Day arrives early, crashing crypto and destabilizing world finance

    Outrageous Predictions

    Quantum leap Q-Day arrives early, crashing crypto and destabilizing world finance

    Neil Wilson

    Investor Content Strategist

    A quantum computer cracks today’s digital security, bringing enough chaos with it that Bitcoin crash...
  • A Fortune 500 company names an AI model as CEO

    Outrageous Predictions

    A Fortune 500 company names an AI model as CEO

    Charu Chanana

    Chief Investment Strategist

    Can AI be trusted to take over in the boardroom? With the right algorithms and balanced human oversi...
  • Despite concerns, U.S. 2026 mid-term elections proceed smoothly

    Outrageous Predictions

    Despite concerns, U.S. 2026 mid-term elections proceed smoothly

    John J. Hardy

    Global Head of Macro Strategy

    In spite of outstanding threats to the American democratic process, the US midterms come and go cord...
  • China unleashes CNY 50 trillion stimulus to reflate its economy

    Outrageous Predictions

    China unleashes CNY 50 trillion stimulus to reflate its economy

    Charu Chanana

    Chief Investment Strategist

    Having created history’s most epic debt bubble, China boldly bets that fiscal stimulus to the tune o...

This content is marketing material. 

None of the information provided on this website constitutes an offer, solicitation, or endorsement to buy or sell any financial instrument, nor is it financial, investment, or trading advice. Saxo Bank A/S and its entities within the Saxo Bank Group provide execution-only services, with all trades and investments based on self-directed decisions. Analysis, research, and educational content is for informational purposes only and should not be considered advice or a recommendation.

Saxo’s content may reflect the personal views of the author, which are subject to change without notice. Mentions of specific financial products are for illustrative purposes only and may serve to clarify financial literacy topics. Content classified as investment research is marketing material and does not meet legal requirements for independent research.

Saxo partners with companies that provide compensation for promotional activities conducted on its platform. Some partners also pay retrocessions contingent on clients investing in products from those partners. 

While Saxo receives compensation from these partnerships, all educational and research content remains focused on providing information to clients.

Before making any investment decisions, you should assess your own financial situation, needs, and objectives, and consider seeking independent professional advice. Saxo does not guarantee the accuracy or completeness of any information provided and assumes no liability for any errors, omissions, losses, or damages resulting from the use of this information.

Please refer to our full disclaimer and notification on non-independent investment research for more details.

Saxo Bank A/S (Headquarters)
Philip Heymans Alle 15
2900 Hellerup
Denmark

Contact Saxo

Select region

International
International

All trading and investing comes with risk, including but not limited to the potential to lose your entire invested amount.

Information on our international website (as selected from the globe drop-down) can be accessed worldwide and relates to Saxo Bank A/S as the parent company of the Saxo Bank Group. Any mention of the Saxo Bank Group refers to the overall organisation, including subsidiaries and branches under Saxo Bank A/S. Client agreements are made with the relevant Saxo entity based on your country of residence and are governed by the applicable laws of that entity's jurisdiction.

Apple and the Apple logo are trademarks of Apple Inc., registered in the US and other countries. App Store is a service mark of Apple Inc. Google Play and the Google Play logo are trademarks of Google LLC.