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# Earnings season is here: which stocks our tracked accounts are loudest about going into Q2 reports

> Five of America's biggest banks open Q2 earnings season on Tuesday, and the accounts Quantral tracks gave them one mention all week. Here is what the crowd is actually loud about going into the reports, from a split, bearish-leaning Netflix room to a credible TSMC build.

By Maya Koeva · 2026-07-13

![A glossy chrome opening bell mounted over a rising neon bar chart, illustrating the start of earnings season.](/blog/earnings-season-loudest-stocks.png)

Q2 earnings season opens this week. JPMorgan, Goldman Sachs, Bank of America, Wells
Fargo, and Citigroup all report Tuesday before the open, the same morning as the June
CPI print, with Morgan Stanley and ASML on Wednesday and TSMC and Netflix on Thursday.
Over the past week (Jul 6 through this morning), the accounts Quantral tracks posted
2,010 mentions from 979 distinct authors. Almost none of that conversation was about
the companies that kick the season off, and that gap is where this piece starts.

## The banks open the season, the crowd shrugs

Across the full week, the five banks reporting Tuesday drew exactly one mention
between them (a single JPMorgan post; zero for Goldman, Bank of America, Wells Fargo,
and Citigroup). One caveat before reading anything into that: our source set skews
hard toward tech and momentum names, so this is a fact about where the retail crowd's
attention lives, not about what matters to markets this week. But that is exactly the
point of tracking it. The event that sets the market's tone on Tuesday is happening
entirely outside the conversation we score. Whatever the banks report, the crowd we
track has no positioning, no thesis, and no hype to unwind around it.

## Reporting this week: the same day, opposite reads

The two names on this week's calendar the crowd genuinely cares about both report
Thursday, and the conversations behind them could not look more different.

| Company | Reports | Score | Mentions | Trusted |
|---------|:--------|-----:|:--------|-------:|
| Netflix (NFLX) | Thu Jul 16 | 45 | 70 (bull 40% / bear 46%) | 24% |
| TSMC (TSM) | Thu Jul 16 | 84 | 30 (bull 77% / bear 10%) | 30% |

[Netflix](/learn/what-is-a-stock-signal) heads into its report with a split room
leaning slightly bearish: 40% of its 70 mentions were bullish against 46% bearish, and
the bearish camp is the more [credible](/learn/what-is-a-credibility-score) one, with
an average credibility of 0.57 against the bulls' 0.50. The score sits at 45, just
below neutral. That is not a prediction of a bad quarter. It is a crowd that rallied a
name hard and is now arguing with itself about whether the story is priced in.

*[Chart: Netflix mentions on Quantral, Jul 6 to 12: a bearish open to the week, then a split room arguing into Thursday's report]*

TSMC is the mirror image. A third of the volume, but 77% bullish, and the skeptics are
not a serious bench: the few bearish voices carry an average credibility of 0.07,
against 0.53 for the bulls. The score reads that lopsided quality gap as an 84. Going
into Thursday, the credible crowd is positioned one way on the chipmaker and genuinely
divided on the streamer.

## What a beat looks like when it lands: Penguin Solutions

One of the week's loudest names already showed how this season can go. Penguin
Solutions reported on Jul 7: record quarterly net sales of $479 million, up 48% year
over year, EPS 50% above consensus, and a raised full-year outlook. The stock jumped
25% the next session. We had taken the name apart in
[its own autopsy](/blog/signal-autopsy-penguin-solutions) going into that print: a
small, credible crowd had been one-sided on it for five weeks, with the Jul 7 report
explicitly framed as the catalyst. The beat-and-raise paid that patience off, and the
talk that surged afterward stayed credible, with 39% of the week's 89 mentions coming
from [trusted](/learn/how-a-track-record-is-graded) authors. If you want the mechanics
of why beats like this one get paid while others get sold, we wrote up
[what an earnings beat actually measures](/learn/what-is-an-earnings-beat) today too.

## The loudest names mostly report later

Here is the top of the mention leaderboard for the week, and the season's quirk: the
names the crowd is loudest about mostly do not report for weeks. Score is the 7-day
Quantral signal score as of Jul 13; trusted is the share of mentions from authors with
a real track record.

| Company | Score | Mentions | Trusted | Reports |
|---------|-----:|:--------|-------:|:--------|
| Meta (META) | 90 | 157 (bull 49% / bear 32%) | 17% | Wed Jul 29 |
| Micron (MU) | 84 | 152 (bull 47% / bear 30%) | 26% | Sep 29 |
| Nebius (NBIS) | 87 | 90 (bull 79% / bear 11%) | 32% | Later this season |
| Penguin Solutions (PENG) | 86 | 89 (bull 64% / bear 18%) | 39% | Reported Jul 7 |
| SanDisk (SNDK) | 78 | 77 (bull 61% / bear 25%) | 25% | Later this season |

Meta is the one big-cap [catalyst](/learn/what-is-a-catalyst) the crowd is already
loud about, two weeks ahead of its Jul 29 report. Micron, the second-loudest name we
track, does not report until Sep 29 on its fiscal calendar, so all of that chatter is
cycle thesis, not earnings positioning. And Wendy's, last week's meme leader, is
fading on schedule: down to 75 mentions with a near-even bull-bear split and a score
of 51.

## The takeaway

Earnings season is when expectations get graded, and the conversation going into a
report tells you what the expectations actually are. This week the setup is specific:
the market-moving prints on Tuesday carry no crowd positioning at all in our set, and
Thursday offers a clean A/B test of the score's core idea, a credible one-sided room
(TSMC, 84) against a split room where the skeptics have the better track record
(Netflix, 45). We will know by Friday which read the tape agreed with. Volume tells
you where the attention is; [credibility](/learn/what-is-a-credibility-score) tells
you whose expectations are worth grading.

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*Quantral surfaces signals and context from public sources to support your own research.
Nothing here is financial advice or a recommendation to buy or sell. Past signals are not
indicative of future results.*
