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How earnings season affects major indices: Nasdaq 100, S&P 500, and more.

Unpack the intricate relationship between corporate earnings, index weighting, and market volatility, and discover why investor reactions to earnings surprises are becoming increasingly disproportionate.

Stock Exchange_UK_London_City_View
  • Index reaction to earnings: Unexpected corporate profits/losses create big stock price swings, strongly influencing major indexes (S&P 500, Nasdaq 100).
  • Understand how different index weighting (market-cap vs. price-weighted) amplifies or attenuates the influence of top companies.
  • Explore the current market trend where modest earnings beats are met with minimal gains, while even slight misses lead to disproportionate sell-offs.
  • Learn why management's forward guidance and factors like share buybacks, rather than just past results, increasingly dictate post-earnings stock performance.

Why earnings season matters

Earnings season kicks off about two weeks after a quarter ends. During the next six weeks, most listed companies will spill their numbers, revenue, profit, costs, and what the bosses think will happen next. It’s a sort of check on how real a firm’s health is.

The big thing here is an earnings surprise: the gap between what analysts guessed and what the company actually reports. If the surprise is good, the stock usually jumps. If it’s bad, the price generally drops. But it’s not always that straightforward, as market participants might still like a company that misses its target but loses less than expected, and might slam a firm that grew earnings but still fell short of a very high forecast.

Analyst forecasts, therefore, add a lot of wobble, making earnings releases a major spark for price moves and market stress.

Company earnings releases do not just affect the stock of that company, but also impact indexes and, at times, overall market sentiment as well.

The anatomy of an index: Weighting methodologies and their consequences

The vulnerability of a major index to the movements of a single company's stock during earnings season is not uniform but a direct function of the index's architectural design.

A nuanced understanding of each index's weighting methodology is essential for correctly interpreting market signals. This analysis reveals that the influence of corporate earnings is systematically amplified or attenuated based on how a company's performance impacts the overall index calculation.

S&P 500 – The S&P 500 is a market‑cap weighted index, meaning the biggest companies count more. Tech giants, big banks, and retail leaders all have heavy pull, especially when their earnings are far off from expectations.

2025-10-08 09_27_33-Greenshot
Source: TradingView. Data as of October 2, 2025.

Nasdaq 100 – The Nasdaq 100 also uses market cap, but it caps any stock at roughly 15 % and the top five together can’t be more than 60 %. It leaves out financial firms and leans heavy on tech and fast‑growing companies. Because of the caps, a surprise from a mega‑tech firm still shakes the index, but it can’t completely dominate it.

FTSE 100 – The FTSE 100 lists the 100 biggest firms on the London Stock Exchange. It follows a similar cap‑based weighting – the larger the firm, the more it moves the whole index. A big oil company or retailer beating or missing estimates can sway the whole UK market mood.

Earnings season can thus elicit major market moves for indexes. Since the biggest firms have the biggest weight, their earnings surprises quickly lead to significant moves for indices. Those moves feed back into where people put their money, how derivatives are priced, and overall confidence.

Price-weighted indices: The Dow Jones Industrial Average

The Dow Jones Industrial Average works on a price‑weighted system. That means a company’s share price, not its total value, decides how much weighting it holds on the index.

The math is simple: add up the 30 stock prices and then split the total by the “Dow divisor,” a number that changes whenever a split or similar event happens. Because of this set‑up, a stock that trades at ninety dollars can sway the Dow more than a company worth billions that only costs ten dollars per share.

A one‑dollar jump in the high‑priced stock may move the index noticeably, while the same one‑dollar move in the cheap stock does almost nothing.

The dominance of market leaders: A tale of disproportionate influence

What we see today is that a handful of big‑time firms carry a lot of weight in most major indexes. During earnings season, this shows up clearly: a few reports can set the tone for the whole market.

This is not a broad market phenomenon, but a concentration of performance driven by the characteristics of each index.

  • The S&P 500 – the “Magnificent Seven”

Most of the S&P 500’s recent gains come from just a few names. Take Nvidia, it makes up about 7 % of the index. Microsoft is about 6 %, and Apple is also around 6 %. The nine biggest firms together own a big chunk of the whole list. Their earnings are more than half of what the index is expected to make in the next quarter. If you pull out the tech group, the growth forecast would drop from +5 % to just +2 % (at the time of writing).

  • Nasdaq 100 – tech takes the driver’s seat

The Nasdaq 100 looks even tighter. Nvidia now counts for 13 % of the index, Microsoft and Apple each account for about 12 %. The top ten fill more than a third of the whole value. That makes the Nasdaq almost a story about AI and cloud computers. If Nvidia’s stock jumps, the whole Nasdaq climbs. If a regulator steps on an AI product, the index can tumble fast.

Because the Nasdaq is so packed with the same kind of firms, its risk feels focused on one idea, the AI boom. That can be good when the hype is real, but it also means a single setback can lead to large losses.

  • Dow Jones – price weighting changes the game

The Dow works differently. It doesn’t look at company size, it looks at the price of each stock. A high‑price share moves the Dow more than a cheaper one, even if the cheap one is bigger.

Right now, Goldman Sachs makes up 10 % of the Dow, Microsoft about 7 %, and Caterpillar close to 6 %. Because the Dow divides the total price by a special number, a big swing in Goldman’s price pulls the index up or down more than the same percent change in Apple would.

So the Dow tells a story that’s more about how much the stock costs than how big the company is. It can give investors a view of the financial and industrial side of the market that’s not all about tech. That can be useful, but it also means the Dow can move for reasons that don’t match the whole market’s health.

  • FTSE 100 – the old‑school mix

Across the ocean, the FTSE 100 looks less crowded with tech. Its biggest parts are AstraZeneca (drugs), HSBC (banking), and Shell (oil). No single sector has the same grip as tech does in the US indexes. The spread is wider, so a shock to one company doesn’t wreck the whole list. The FTSE reacts more to things like oil prices, medicine approvals, and banking rules.

Because it lacks the tech boom, the FTSE may miss out on the fast growth the US indexes chase. But it also avoids the big swings when a single giant like Nvidia jumps. It’s a smoother ride, maybe, but also could be slower to gain in the new economy.

INDEX WEIGHTING METHODOLOGY NUMBER OF COMPONENTS KEY CHARACTERISTICS TOP 3 COMPONENTS (BY WEIGHT)
S&P 500 Float-Adjusted Market Cap 500 Proxy for U.S. large-cap market. Nvidia (7.30%), Microsoft (6.3%), Apple (6.24%)
NASDAQ 100 Modified Market Cap 100 Non-financial companies. Capped weights. Nvidia (13.62%), Microsoft (11.73%), Apple (11.63%).
Dow Jones Price-Weighted 30 A stock's price, not its market cap, determines influence. Goldman Sachs (10.64%), Microsoft (6.82%), Caterpillar (6.25%).
FTSE 100 Market Cap 100 100 largest UK companies. AstraZeneca, HSBC, Shell.

Data-driven analysis of earnings surprises and volatility

Earnings “surprise” is the gap between what a company actually reports and what analysts expect. Investors see this gap as a sign of how good management of the company is and how fast the firm might grow. Because of that, the market’s reaction to surprise has become a key gauge of a stock’s value.

Lately, the numbers show a striking split: modest beats are taken in stride, but even tiny misses have been causing big sell‑offs. This suggests that today’s markets are more sensitive to anything less than perfect, especially in fast‑growing sectors, by treating beats as the normal state and slashing stocks when they miss.

The expectation gap: Beats set the new floor

Recent data from the S&P 500's Q2 2025 earnings season illustrates this phenomenon with striking clarity. An impressive 82% of companies beat EPS estimates, well above the post-pandemic average of 78%. The aggregate surprise for the index was a robust +7.0%, more than double the historical average of +3.3%.

Despite these overwhelmingly positive results, the market's response was lopsided. Companies that beat expectations saw an average price increase of just 1.5%, which is in line with historical averages, suggesting a beat is now the minimum requirement for a stable stock price. In stark contrast, companies that missed expectations were met with an average sell-off of 10%, more than twice the historical decline.

This disproportionate punishment for a negative surprise indicates a market that is already priced for perfection. Any deviation from the positive narrative, no matter how minor, can trigger a sharp and significant correction.

Case study: AstraZeneca and the FTSE 100

In September 2025, the FTSE 100 fell, led by a 3.2 % drop in AstraZeneca stock. The trigger was an analyst downgrade and the firm’s decision to pause investment at a research site.

That raised doubts about the company’s long‑term revenue goals, which some called “over‑optimistic.” Unlike the US market, which is largely driven by AI‑growth stories, the FTSE 100 reacts more to classic worries such as capital use, strategy execution, and rating changes for established firms.

Still, the AstraZeneca episode backs up the bigger point: expectation‑driven volatility shows up everywhere, and markets quickly re‑price shares when actual performance drifts from analyst targets.

How earnings relate to index returns

While historical results provide a foundation, the most market-moving aspect of any earnings report is management's forward guidance. The outlook for future revenue, margins, and business conditions often dictates post-report stock performance more than past results.

The market’s focus on NVIDIA's decelerating growth in one segment, despite strong overall performance, underscores this principle. Similarly, the continued commitment of major technology companies to significant capital expenditure in AI signals long-term conviction that the market is keen to reward, even in the face of temporary headwinds.

The correlation between earnings and index returns

If you dig into the S&P 500 numbers for 2025, you’ll see a messy mix of earnings, dividend cash, and price moves. About two‑thirds of the index’s YTD return in 2025 came from profits and dividend payouts. That means cash return still outweighs just price gains.

But a lot of the reported EPS growth isn’t from actual sales but rather from ‘financial tricks.’

  • Apple bought back $23.6 billion of its own shares in Q2 2025.
  • The top four buyback makers made up almost 27 % of total S&P 500 buybacks.

Those buybacks push EPS up, but they also make valuations shaky. This is a crucial distinction, as a company's EPS can rise even if its total net income remains flat or declines, creating a more fragile basis for market valuation.

When the buyback flow slows, the price can tumble fast. On top of that, the way the index is built makes the problem bigger. The S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100 are led by a few tech giants, while the Dow Jones uses price‑weighting, which gives a different risk picture. That means a few megacaps rallying on heavy repurchase programmes can lift the whole index, hiding weak spots in other sectors.

Conclusion: Getting through the earnings cycle

Bottom line, earnings season is kind of an uneven game where future outlooks, concentration risk, and cash tricks drive market moves. The “beat and tolerate, miss and punish” pattern shows investors punish a miss more sharply than they cheer a beat, especially when companies like NVIDIA give a segment‑level slowdown warning. At the same time, the big role of buyback‑driven EPS – shown by Apple’s $23.6 billion buyback and the top four firms holding nearly a quarter of all repurchases – points to a fragile valuation base.

To really understand the season, traders need to break down each report: look at forward numbers, check if AI spending is likely to stick, and watch out for the risk that only a few huge firms are holding up the index. If one does that, one’ll be better at handling the mood swings earnings season brings, and can pull useful insights about both stock performance and the health of the wider economy.

Zain Vawda

Zain Vawda

Market Analyst

Zain is an experienced financial markets analyst and educator with a rich tapestry of experience in the world of retail forex, economics, and market analysis. Initially starting out in a sales and business development role, his passion for economics and technical analysis propelled him towards a career as an analyst.

He has spent the last 3 years in an analyst role honing his skills across various financial domains, including technical analysis, economic data interpretation, price action strategies, and analyzing the geopolitical impacts on global markets. Currently, Zain is advancing in obtaining his Capital Markets & Security Analyst (CMSA) designation through the Corporate Finance Institute (CFI), where he has completed modules in fixed income fundamentals, portfolio management fundamentals, equity market fundamentals, introduction to capital markets, and derivative fundamentals.

He is also a regular guest on radio and television programs in South Africa, providing insight into global markets and the economy. Additionally, he has contributed to the development of a financial markets course approved by BankSeta (Banking Sector Education and Training Authority) at NQF level 6 in South Africa.