Wall Street Week Ahead: Earnings start, inflation data pose tests for resilient US stocks
Indian markets are off to a strong start in 2026, but investors should brace for potential volatility. Corporate earnings, crucial inflation data, and escalating geopolitical tensions are on the horizon. Despite a robust bull market, analysts caut...

The market's recent strength has defied an increasingly volatile geopolitical landscape. After a U.S. military operation that seized Venezuela's leader, officials in President Donald Trump's administration spoke of acquiring Greenland, including potential use of the military. Investors point to a strong outlook for corporate profits, easing monetary policy and coming fiscal stimulus as supports for a bull market that is in its fourth year.
"On balance for this year, the foundation for the market is solid," said Michael Arone, chief investment strategist at State Street Investment Management.
"As we're starting January, the market may be underappreciating some of the events on the horizon that could likely produce higher volatility," Arone said. "It just seems a little too quiet." While geopolitical events have boosted the safe-haven appeal of gold, stocks have largely shrugged off the uncertainty, said Matthew Miskin, co-chief investment strategist at Manulife John Hancock Investments. The Cboe Volatility Index on Friday was not far above its low point from 2025.
"The market's a bit numb to it," Miskin said. "But this is a time where everything is priced near perfection and it's a time where you can take out some insurance or think about some defensive options just in case another geopolitical event hits the headlines."
BANKS BEGIN Q4 RESULTS, CPI ON DECK
Jack Janasiewicz, portfolio manager at Natixis Investment Managers, will be looking to bank results for insight into the health of the consumer, such as on credit card payment defaults, with consumer spending accounting for more than two-thirds of economic activity.
"The banks are going to be telling you something that is going to be pretty important because they're on the front lines," Janasiewicz said.
Investors have been struggling to get a full picture of the economy because the 43-day government shutdown late last year delayed or canceled key reports, with data flow now returning to normal.
The U.S. central bank lowered interest rates in each of its last three meetings of 2025 in response to a weakening labor market, but investors are unsure when it might cut further.
Download ET Markets APP