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Earnings Calendar

Stay ahead of market-moving events with a comprehensive view of upcoming US company earnings reports. Browse by week, filter by ticker or company name, and see estimated EPS alongside previous results to gauge potential surprises. Earnings announcements often trigger the largest single-day price swings of the quarter, making this calendar an essential tool for timing entries, managing risk, and planning your portfolio around volatility events.

This Week1,826
Upcoming1,826
Reported0
Week of May 4 – 8, 2026
Wednesday, May 630 companies
CompanyTickerStatusCalendar
MaxCyte, Inc.
MXCTUpcomingAdd to Calendar
Myomo Inc.
MYOUpcomingAdd to Calendar
Niagen Bioscience, Inc.
NAGEUpcomingAdd to Calendar
NCR Atleos Corporation
NATLUpcomingAdd to Calendar
NACCO Industries, Inc.
NCUpcomingAdd to Calendar
Noodles & Company
NDLSUpcomingAdd to Calendar
New Pacific Metals Corp.
NEWPUpcomingAdd to Calendar
Nexa Resources S.A.
NEXAUpcomingAdd to Calendar
Ingevity Corporation
NGVTUpcomingAdd to Calendar
NiSource, Inc
NIUpcomingAdd to Calendar
NICE Ltd
NICEUpcomingAdd to Calendar
NL Industries, Inc.
NLUpcomingAdd to Calendar
Navios Maritime Partners LP
NMMUpcomingAdd to Calendar
NN, Inc.
NNBRUpcomingAdd to Calendar
Inotiv, Inc.
NOTVUpcomingAdd to Calendar
National Presto Industries, Inc.
NPKUpcomingAdd to Calendar
NerdWallet, Inc.
NRDSUpcomingAdd to Calendar
NRG Energy, Inc.
NRGUpcomingAdd to Calendar
Natural Resource Partners LP
NRPUpcomingAdd to Calendar
Nutrien Ltd.
NTRUpcomingAdd to Calendar
Nuvation Bio Inc.
NUVBUpcomingAdd to Calendar
Novavax, Inc.
NVAXUpcomingAdd to Calendar
NVE Corporation
NVECUpcomingAdd to Calendar
Navigator Holdings Ltd.
NVGSUpcomingAdd to Calendar
enVVeno Medical Corporation
NVNOUpcomingAdd to Calendar
Novo Nordisk A/S
NVOUpcomingAdd to Calendar
Envista Holdings Corporation
NVSTUpcomingAdd to Calendar
Northwest Natural Holding Company
NWNUpcomingAdd to Calendar
Nextdoor Holdings, Inc.
NXDRUpcomingAdd to Calendar
New York Times Company (The)
NYTUpcomingAdd to Calendar

Data sourced from NASDAQ

Why Earnings Dates Matter for Investors

Earnings reports are the single most important recurring event for any publicly traded company. Management guidance, revenue growth, and EPS vs. estimates collectively determine whether a stock moves 5% or 25% in a single session. Knowing which companies report in the coming two weeks prevents surprises and helps you manage portfolio risk proactively.

The EPS estimate shown beside each company is the consensus analyst forecast. A company that beats by a wide margin typically sees a strong positive reaction; one that misses — especially if guidance is cut — often sells off sharply regardless of absolute profitability. Tracking prior results alongside the estimate reveals whether a company has a habit of beating or missing.

For value investors, earnings seasons are opportunities: quality businesses sometimes fall sharply on short-term guidance cuts even when long-term fundamentals remain intact. Monitoring the calendar in advance lets you evaluate those reactions objectively rather than reactively, and decide whether the market's response is rational or an overreaction worth acting on.

How to Use This Calendar

Ahead of earnings by fourteen days, take a close look at how the business has been doing financially. Check whether income is rising or falling, examine profit levels, also peek at free cash flow. Get clear on your expectations well ahead of the report landing.

When earnings hit, skip guessing from just the top-line figure. Flip open the full statement instead. Management often hints at shifts during their outlook talk.

Two days pass before you do anything. When a solid company's share price dips because of a small earnings shortfall, pause. See if the core idea behind owning it still holds. Maybe investors just panicked too much.

Watch closely when firms keep topping forecasts, one after another. These teams tend to set low targets then exceed them — something Buffett pays attention to. Understating early, delivering late — that rhythm shows up where it counts.

Earnings Dates Carry Hidden Weight

Example

Quarterly, firms that trade on stock exchanges share how they performed financially. When earnings roll around, those who invest based on value see if their assumptions hold up under real-world numbers.

That figure next to each firm? It's what experts on Wall Street expect the earnings per share to be, averaged out. Once results drop:

A gap-up after a big earnings beat? Could be real momentum. Or maybe just noise from a temporary boost. Look closer at what drove the number.

When a company misses by just a bit, shares usually drop fast — more so if they lower future expectations. A small miss can hit hard when outlooks shrink. If targets get pulled back, selling pressure tends to follow. Slight underperformance often leads to sharp declines, particularly with weaker forecasts ahead.

Still up, yet shares fall — investors wanted stronger numbers ahead, or future outlook missed the mark. Happens more often than expected.

Every now and then, people panic after earnings news. A solid company might lose a tenth of its worth overnight just because it fell short by pennies on profit per share — though nothing real has changed beneath the surface. When healthy firms slip like this, patient buyers see openings instead of losses. Moments of fear create space for those who look past today's noise.

Tip: Use the search bar above to filter by specific companies in your watchlist so you never miss a report.

Frequently asked questions

All earnings dates and EPS estimates are sourced from the NASDAQ public calendar API. Data is refreshed on a 14-day rolling basis to ensure upcoming reports are always current.

Never miss a market-moving earnings report — browse this week’s calendar above.

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