The market gets a stress test of the U.S. consumer at sunrise Tuesday.
Five companies that touch almost every part of how Americans spend money report earnings before the open, covering what people ship, what they drive, what they drink, what they listen to, and how they fly.
If the consumer is slowing down, this is the morning it shows up.
What Each Report Tells Investors
UPS gives the read on shipping volumes, which is the closest thing to a real-time gauge of e-commerce demand and small-business activity in the economy.
General Motors signals whether buyers are still paying sticker price for new cars or whether dealers are starting to sweat as auto inventory creeps higher. JetBlue's report follows a season where airlines posted some of their best demand in years, with discount carriers being the weakest link in that story.
Coca-Cola is a margin and pricing story, since the company has been raising prices and Wall Street wants to know if shoppers are pushing back.
Spotify is the wildcard, with subscription growth and ad revenue powering the stock to record highs heading into the print.
The Afternoon And After
Starbucks and Robinhood report after the bell, with Starbucks in the middle of a turnaround and Robinhood riding the momentum from its September 2025 S&P 500 inclusion.
Consumer confidence data for April drops during the day at 10 a.m. Eastern, adding another piece to the same puzzle these earnings are filling in.
The Bigger Week
Tuesday is just the start of a packed week, with Wednesday bringing the Fed decision plus earnings from Meta, Amazon, Microsoft, and Alphabet after the close.
Thursday delivers Apple, Reddit, Rivian, plus first-quarter GDP and the Fed's preferred inflation gauge. Berkshire Hathaway closes the run on Saturday.
What To Watch
If UPS volumes disappoint and GM cuts guidance in the same morning, the consumer slowdown narrative gets real fast. If both beat, the soft-landing trade gets another week of life.
