Skip to Main Content

The Credit Market Lens: A Higher Bar for Earnings Season

Higher earnings forecasts across corporate credit have raised the bar for second-quarter reporting, while AI hyperscaler capital spending is poised to continue to drive the narrative.
The Credit Market Lens: A Higher Bar for Earnings Season
The Credit Market Lens: A Higher Bar for Earnings Season
Headshot of Lotfi Karoui
 | {read_time} min read

Since the start of the year, the market has become more optimistic on the earnings outlook for U.S. dollar (USD) investment grade (IG) corporate issuers, shrugging off the Iran conflict and consistently revising earnings forecasts higher (see Figure 1). The first wave of upgrades came after the AI hyperscalers reported, by and large, strong earnings. But most of the improvement has stemmed from the rest of the non-financials index, with analysts quadrupling their one-year aggregate EBITDA (earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization) growth expectations, from 5% at the end of January to more than 20% as of 30 June.

Figure 1: Analysts have increased one-year-ahead EBITDA growth forecasts for USD IG corporate issuers

Monthly bar chart showing one-year-ahead EBITDA growth forecasts for USD IG non-financials from December 2025 to June 2026. Forecasts rise across Aggregate, AI hyperscalers, and ex hyperscalers, with AI hyperscalers remaining the highest series.
Source: Bloomberg, PIMCO as of 30 June 2026. AI hyperscalers include Alphabet (GOOGL), Amazon (AMZN), Meta Platforms (META), Microsoft (MSFT), and Oracle (ORCL).

And despite modest fears of an inflationary shock that would eat away at margins, the market has so far believed these fears to be unwarranted; aggregate margin expectations for USD IG corporates have improved from 20% to 24% since the start of year, above the 2015-2025 median of 21% (see Figure 2).

Figure 2: EBITDA margin expectations have risen above the median of the past 10 years

Monthly bar chart showing one-year-ahead EBITDA margin forecasts for USD IG non-financials from December 2025 to June 2026. Aggregate and ex hyperscaler margins rise modestly, while AI hyperscaler margins remain materially higher. A dashed line marks the 2015–2025 median at 21%.
Source: Bloomberg, PIMCO as of 30 June 2026. AI hyperscalers include Alphabet (GOOGL), Amazon (AMZN), Meta Platforms (META), Microsoft (MSFT), and Oracle (ORCL).

Aside from earnings, company forward guidance vis-à-vis capital expenditure plans will remain a key focus, particularly for the hyperscalers. As of 2025, these five firms accounted for around one-third of aggregate USD IG corporate capex. Although current-year capital plans are already largely set, the focus will be on additional insight into 2027 and beyond, with current forecasts for hyperscalers to account for 54% of total capex by 2027, or $915 billion (see Figure 3). In fact, relative to 2025 levels, the entirety of the expected expansion in USD IG corporate capex has been driven solely by the five hyperscalers.

Figure 3: AI hyperscalers are expected to account for more than 50% of USD IG corporate capex by 2027

Stacked bar chart showing annual capex for the USD IG non-financials index from 2021 to 2025, plus estimates for 2026 and 2027. Total capex rises over the period, with AI hyperscalers accounting for a much larger share by 2027.
Source: Bloomberg (Bloomberg US Agg Industrial Index), PIMCO as of 30 June 2026. AI hyperscalers include Alphabet (GOOGL), Amazon (AMZN), Meta Platforms (META), Microsoft (MSFT), and Oracle (ORCL).

A second-order effect related to capex is that it directly feeds into future earnings expectations; the underlying revenues are recognized as they arise by the “pick and shovel” parts of the AI ecosystem, while the expenses are capitalized for the hyperscalers, thus won’t ultimately be included in EBITDA figures.

The same earnings optimism can be seen across USD high yield (HY) issuers as well. Figure 4 shows that since the end of January, analyst expectations for aggregate EBITDA growth have climbed from just under 4% to more than 14% as of the end of June, with expected EBITDA margins relatively stable (see Figure 5).

Figure 4: Analysts have raised EBITDA growth forecasts for USD HY issuers this year

Monthly bar chart showing one-year-ahead EBITDA growth forecasts for USD HY issuers from December 2025 to June 2026. Forecasts rise sharply, especially after January 2026.
Source: Bloomberg, PIMCO as of 30 June 2026. Issuers from the Bloomberg US Corporate High Yield Index.

Figure 5: USD HY EBITDA margin expectations have remained stable

Monthly bar chart showing one-year-ahead EBITDA margin forecasts for USD HY issuers from December 2025 to June 2026. Margins remain relatively stable, moving within a narrow range around 14%.
Source: Bloomberg, PIMCO as of 30 June 2026. Issuers from the Bloomberg US Corporate High Yield index.

To be clear, this universe of index firms is held constant, as of December 2025, and thus isn’t driven by any compositional effects year-to-date, such as fallen angels (IG issuers downgraded to HY), which would typically have higher EBITDA than the average HY firm given their size. Thus, it is more of a reminder of the resiliency of the U.S. economy so far, despite signs of a deeper K-shaped economic divide (for more, see the 13 April “The Credit Market Lens: Oil Supply Shocks Don’t Age Well”).

Of course, as we enter earnings season in earnest over the coming weeks, time will tell whether the optimism reflected in analyst expectations is warranted for these USD IG and HY issuers.

Michael Puempel and Gabriel Cazaubieilh contributed to this report.

See Credit Markets more Clearly

Subscribe to our LinkedIn Newsletter for data-driven perspectives on public credit liquidity, market structure, and the insights shaping what matters next. New analysis delivered regularly.
Expert Lotfi Karoui

Get Notified When New Articles Publish

Sign up today, and never miss an issue of The Credit Market Lens.

Thank you

Thank you for signing up. You will receive an email notification when the next issue of The Credit Market Lens publishes. 

More from Lotfi Karoui

The Credit Market Lens

Higher rates, weaker underwriting, and software concentration are exposing vulnerabilities in direct lending and leveraged loans, while high yield bonds appear better positioned.

The Credit Market Lens

A widening confidence gap in non-traded investment vehicles is testing private credit valuations, sharpening the case for manager selection and diversification beyond direct lending.

The Credit Market Lens

Why emerging market bonds are delivering the best risk-adjusted returns in fixed income, and what it means for multi-asset portfolios in 2026.

The Credit Market Lens

A rigorous framework anchored in asset-based finance helps define the actual scale and scope of the opportunity.

The Credit Market Lens

Behind the recent rally in energy credit lies a multi-year story of management discipline, restrained capital spending, and sector consolidation.

The Credit Market Lens

Structural pressures from the AI buildout are real, but they are growing slowly, not driving the yield moves investors are watching right now.

The Credit Market Lens

With spreads tight and dispersion rising, the tools investors use to judge performance matter more than ever.

The Credit Market Lens

AI-driven capex is widening the gap between opportunity in equities and risk in credit.

The Credit Market Lens

Oil sends a warning, risk assets shrug, and rates markets price in a more cautious distribution of outcomes.

The Credit Market Lens

How equity and credit investors are reassessing BDC valuations differently – and why high yield defaults continue to play out primarily through distressed exchanges.

The Credit Market Lens

The software sector remains challenged by pressured valuations, uncertain recoveries, and less reliable sponsor support.

The Credit Market Lens

Markets may be pricing some relief for now, but the true measure of an oil shock is how long it endures.

Select Your Location


Americas

Asia Pacific

  • Japan

Europe, Middle East & Africa

  • Europe
Back to top

Leaving PIMCO.com

You are now leaving the PIMCO website.