Ten Major UK and European Earnings to Watch Next Week

Neil Wilson
Investor Content Strategist
Ten Major UK and European Earnings to Watch Next Week
Key Points
- European companies kick off Q2 reporting season, the first to feature the impact of tariffs
- Defence, Banks, Pharmaceuticals to report in the coming days
- Investors focus in on tariff impact
A look ahead to some major European and UK earnings releases in the coming days.
Monday, 21 July
Ryanair: Strong summer season and robust ticket sales expected to see Q1 FY26 after-tax profits double. CEO Michael O’Leary reckons strength in pricing means the airline can recover all of its 7% decline in average fares suffered last year. Consensus is for $5bn in revenues from $2.58bn in the prior quarter. Rival easyJet posted strong profit growth as travel demand and pricing is firm but warned of profit hit from French air traffic control strikes at the start of July.
Tuesday, 22 July
SAP: Investors are looking for whether Europe’s largest software company can maintain its momentum from Q1 results which saw the shares surge on forecast-beating income and strong cost discipline, with the company enjoying rising demand for its cloud-based services related to the AI boom. Shares rallied the most in six years on the last set of results and are up 10% YTD.
UniCredit: Stock is up 50% YTD as European bank stocks enjoy a rare boon. UniCredit has raised its stake in Commerzbank to 20% and siganlled its interest in a possible takeover – investors will want to know more about this and its takeover of rival Banco BPM, which has been dealt a blow after an Italian court ruled UniCredit must exit Russia to complete the transaction.
Compass Group: Post-Covid return-to-normal winner, the contract food business Compass may see tailwinds from US payrolls continuing to surprise as 68% of group revenues are from the US. Last update saw management stick to annual guidance despite an 8.5% rise in organic turnover. It expects full-year high single-digit growth in underlying operating profits, supported by revenue increase 7.5%. Look for any shift in the guidance after this quarter now there is perhaps a little more visibility for the FY and on tariffs.
Wednesday, 23 July
Thales: This European defence spending winner soared after Q1 results and is up around 80% YTD. Europe's largest defence electronics posted like-for-like adjusted operating income up 5.7% to €2.42 billion as revenues gained 8.3% to €20.58 billion in Q1. Investors looking for signs of continued order inflows and commentary around the German/French spending commitments, particularly after French President Macron said the country would increase military spending to €64bn by 2027, an additional €3.5 billion in 2026 and €3 billion in 2027 that will take the total to double the run rate of 2017.
Thursday, 24 July
Roche: The Swiss drug giant reported 6% growth in group sales in Q1, driven by an 8% increase in pharmaceutical sales, though diagnostics was flat. The company stuck to its full-year guidance of mid-single-digit sales growth, despite a 5% negative impact from currency fluctuations. The key focus could be on Trump’s tariffs on pharmaceuticals, which he has threatened to introduce by 1 August. Roche said in the Q1 earnings call it was satisfied with mitigating tariffs, for example by shifting inventories. Investors will want further reassurances in the Q2 call – so far the stock has failed to recover much from its post Liberation Day lows.
Nestle: The world’s largest packaged foods group said the impact of US tariffs was "unclear" when it reported better-than-expected first-quarter organic sales growth. The firm, which at the same time hiked prices for its Kit-Kat chocolate bars and Nescafe coffee, maintained its 2025 outlook, expecting organic sales growth to improve operating profit margin of at least 16%. Investors will be searching for whether management can offer any fresh perspective on tariffs, and how it judges tailwinds from declining cocoa prices, which have halved since the start of the year.
Lloyds: Shares of the UK bank have risen about 40% so far this year and expectations are for continued growth in net interest income (NII), which rose 3% in Q1 to £3.29bn. Q1 saw net interest margins rise to 3.03% from 2.97%. Morgan Stanley forecasts this to tick up further to 3.06% and 2.1% QoQ growth in NII. About the same time as the results we are expecting a Supreme Court ruling on motor finance, which several analysts have said could be a positive catalyst for the stock and the broader bank sector in the UK.Investors will be happy to get clarity on this front as it could remove an overhang for the shares. Investors will also want to hear more about the £4bn investment plan to develop new revenue streams to make it less reliant on NII. Lloyds Q1 profits fell 7% to £1.5bn, in line with forecasts, due to increased provisions for bad loans and the expected impact of tariffs – look for signs that they are less worried than three months ago on those fronts.
Friday, 25 July
Volkswagen: Tariffs are key here as German automaker is at the centre of the EU-US spat over trade. Reporting Q1 numbers in April, VW posted a 37% decline in profit to €2.9bn, albeit revenues ticked up 2.8% as it enjoyed momentum in markets outside of China. Management guided expectations for operating return on sales, net cash flow and net liquidity at the lower end of annual forecasts. Deutsche Bank notes that deliveries in Q2 grew by 1% from last year, mainly driven by Europe and South America as North America was down by double-digits. A number of one-off factors will hit profits in Q2, while tariffs will “take their toll”, says DB.
NatWest: Like Lloyds, the outlook on NII seems positive, with Morgan Stanley reckoning on Q2 delivering ahead of management forecasts for income to be at the “upper end of our previously guided range of £15.2-15.7 billion” for the full year. Citi also suggested back in February that this guidance was “conservative”. Q1 was certainly on the positive side as pre-tax operating profits rose 36% from the year before to £1.8bn, ahead of the £1.6bn anticipated, despite a higher-than-expected provision for “economic uncertainty”, for which we might read “tariffs”. NIM had risen to 2.27% from 1.19% in the previous three months.
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