Wall Street’s Week Ahead: Jobs Report, Fed Signals and Major Earnings From Disney, Palantir, AMD and Uber as Iran Risks Linger

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JBizNews Desk | New York | Sunday, May 3, 2026

Wall Street enters one of its most consequential weeks of the year with investors navigating a powerful crosscurrent of forces: a critical jobs report on Friday, a wave of major corporate earnings, a Federal Reserve that just held rates steady, and an unresolved Iran conflict that continues to shadow global energy markets and economic forecasts alike.

Where Markets Stand

April ended on a high note. The S&P 500 closed Friday, May 1 at 7,230.12, up 0.29 percent on the session. The Nasdaq Composite hit a fresh all-time high, closing at 25,114.44, up 0.89 percent. The Dow Jones Industrial Average slipped 152.87 points, or 0.31 percent, to settle at 49,499.27. For the month, the S&P 500 and Nasdaq posted their best monthly performance since 2020, while the Dow notched its best month since November 2024. The CBOE Volatility Index, known as the VIX, closed below 17 — a nearly two-week low — signaling reduced near-term fear even as macro risks remain elevated.

Ben Snider, chief U.S. equity strategist at Goldman Sachs Research, said in a note published April 24 that the S&P 500 is forecast to climb 6 percent to a year-end target of 7,600, built on expectations of 12 percent earnings-per-share growth in 2026. “In the near term, equity market gyrations will likely continue to mirror geopolitical volatility,” Snider wrote, identifying the Iran war and the AI buildout as “the clearest equity market risks in coming weeks.” Year-to-date share buyback authorizations have hit a record $422 billion, and announced merger-and-acquisition volumes have more than doubled from a year ago, Snider noted.

The Fed Holds — Rates Stay Put

The Federal Reserve held interest rates steady at its meeting this week, with the federal funds rate remaining between 3.5 and 3.75 percent. Three dissents on the policy statement signaled a lack of support for any easing bias, according to Charles Schwab market commentary published May 1. According to the CME FedWatch Tool, the chance of a rate cut at the June meeting stands at just 5 percent. Futures markets suggest rates will stay at current levels through the year, with only a 10 percent probability of a cut and a 6 percent chance of a hike — a notable shift given that odds of a hike were near zero before the meeting.

Core PCE, the Fed’s preferred inflation gauge, jumped to 4.3 percent in the first quarter from 2.7 percent in the prior quarter — above the 4.1 percent expected. New York Fed President John Williams is scheduled to speak Monday and his remarks will be scrutinized for any fresh signals on the rate path. Bob Lang, founder and chief options analyst at Explosive Options, told CNBC on May 1 that a strong jobs number could be welcome news for markets, though he does not expect it would meaningfully shift the interest rate outlook given the Fed’s current posture.

Friday’s Main Event: The Jobs Report

The week’s most consequential data release arrives Friday, May 8, when the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics publishes the April nonfarm payrolls report. Economists polled by FactSet expect the U.S. economy to have added just 50,000 jobs in April — far below the prior reading of 178,000 — with the unemployment rate expected to hold steady at 4.3 percent. Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell said last week that the labor market had shown “more and more signs of stability.” Supporting data arrives throughout the week: the JOLTS job openings report for March drops Tuesday, May 5; ADP’s private payroll survey for April publishes Wednesday, May 6, with economists polled by FactSet expecting 95,000 private-sector job additions; and initial jobless claims arrive Thursday, May 7.

Palantir: Monday’s Marquee Report

Palantir Technologies reports after the market close Monday, May 4, and expectations are high. Wall Street analysts project earnings per share of $0.28 — a 115 percent jump year over year — alongside revenue of approximately $1.54 billion, up 74 percent annually, according to LSEG data cited by CNBC on May 3. U.S. commercial and government revenue are both forecast to grow more than 60 percent, reflecting surging demand for Palantir’s artificial intelligence platform. William Power, senior analyst at Baird, reaffirmed an Outperform rating and a $200 price target ahead of the print, saying he expects “another strong quarter.” Oppenheimer initiated coverage this week with an Outperform rating and a $200 price target. Citigroup carries a Buy rating with a $210 target. Not everyone is bullish: RBC Capital Markets set a $90 price target, citing elevated valuations — the stock trades at roughly 50 times expected 2026 revenue — and flagged slowing government contract trends and growing competition from Microsoft, Databricks, Snowflake, OpenAI and Anthropic.

AMD: Tuesday’s AI Bellwether

Advanced Micro Devices reports Tuesday, May 6, after the market close, with earnings and revenue both expected to grow by double digits versus a year ago, according to LSEG. All eyes will be on AMD’s artificial intelligence chip roadmap and whether the company can sustain momentum against Nvidia. Ross Seymore, analyst at Deutsche Bank, said ahead of the report that secular and cyclical revenue tailwinds combined with operating margin leverage support upside potential, but maintained a Hold rating, writing that the fundamental upside is “largely reflected in AMD’s share price following the recent significant appreciation.” Bespoke Investment Group data shows AMD tops earnings estimates 62 percent of the time.

Disney: Wednesday’s Consumer Pulse

Walt Disney reports Wednesday, May 6, before the market open, with analysts expecting earnings per share of $1.49 — a 2.8 percent increase — on revenue of $24.85 billion, up 5 percent annually, according to Forex.com analysis published May 4. Entertainment revenue is expected to rise 8.3 percent, Sports revenue around 1.5 percent, and Experience revenue 6.1 percent. The main focus will be Disney+ and Hulu streaming profitability, with management having guided to $500 million in streaming operating income — the metric most likely to move the stock. Parks and Experiences remain the largest contributor to operating income, but analysts warn that U.S. demand and international tourism trends could be softening. The report comes weeks after Disney cut roughly 1,000 jobs across multiple divisions.

Uber: Wednesday’s Ride-Hailing Read

Uber Technologies also reports Wednesday, May 6, before the bell. Analysts expect double-digit revenue growth but double-digit declines in earnings versus a year ago, according to LSEG. Ross Sandler, analyst at Barclays, said ahead of the report that he expects solid demand but flagged higher gas prices and bad weather as near-term cost pressures. “Uber has enough breadth to manage these near-term dynamics, and while robotaxi risk continues to weigh on the story, the risk/reward remains attractive,” Sandler said. Bespoke data shows Uber beats earnings estimates 61 percent of the time.

The Iran Shadow

Overhanging all of it is the ongoing Iran conflict and its grip on global energy markets. President Donald Trump said Saturday he is reviewing Iran’s 14-point peace proposal but “can’t imagine” it is acceptable. A White House Situation Room meeting on Iran is expected Monday with Vice President JD Vance, Chief of Staff Susie Wiles and special envoy Steve Witkoff. Brent crude remains elevated after surging more than 55 percent since the war began February 28. The S&P Global U.S. Manufacturing PMI rose to 54.5 in April from 52.3 in March — its strongest expansion since May 2022 — but the ISM Prices Index jumped 6.3 points to 84.6, its highest since April 2022, a warning that energy-driven inflation is seeping through the supply chain. ISM Services PMI for April publishes Tuesday, May 5, offering the next read on whether the service sector is holding up against rising costs.

With more than half of S&P 500 companies having reported thus far — over 80 percent beating expectations — the earnings season has provided a floor of confidence under the market. But with jobs data, Fed guidance, Iran diplomacy and major tech and consumer earnings all landing in the same five-day window, this week will test whether that confidence holds.

JBizNews Desk
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