Skip to content
November 9, 2025Cryptopolitan logoCryptopolitan

Corporate America shrugs off tariff risks with an 11% median profit jump in Q3

Corporate America just did the one thing Wall Street doubted it could pull off; it posted the fastest earnings growth in four years even while Donald Trump’s trade war sat on its ￰0￱ profits across the Russell 3000 surged by 11% year over year in the third quarter, up from 6% the previous quarter, according to Morgan ￰1￱ of the 11 main sectors that make up the S&P 500, six managed to pull off average earnings gains in the last three months through September. That’s a huge leap from the second quarter, when only financials and mega-cap tech were in the ￰2￱ Bank ran the numbers and confirmed that this sudden uptick was across multiple industries.

Trump’s sweeping tariffs were expected to choke profits, wreck supply chains, and push up ￰3￱ somehow, companies kept pushing. “Companies have found ways to absorb the tariff impact and consumers will keep spending so long as they have a job,” said Dec Mullarkey, managing director at SLC Management, which manages $300 ￰4￱ corporate toughness is showing up all over the earnings ￰5￱ sectors defy expectations in Q3 David Kostin, chief equity strategist at Goldman Sachs, wrote in a note this week that most S&P 500 companies have already reported Q3 results, and a massive portion beat analyst forecasts. “In our 25-year data history, this frequency of earnings surprises has been surpassed only during the Covid reopening period in 2020-2021,” said David.

Meanwhile, expectations for Q4 profits are still ￰6￱ now project a 7.5% increase, based on numbers tracked by ￰7￱ of that optimism is thanks to the deal-making Trump pulled off with Japan and the European ￰8￱ after Trump sat down with Xi Jinping, both leaders agreed to a one-year trade truce, which calmed market nerves across the ￰9￱ like Ford and General Motors said their expected tariff pain shrank thanks to Trump’s extension of import relief on car ￰10￱ energy and transport, companies like NRG Energy benefited from more data center construction, and Southwest Airlines saw revenue jump as travel demand kept ￰11￱ banking, firms like Goldman Sachs, Citigroup, and JPMorgan Chase posted high profits driven by renewed deal activity and stronger trading income as market volatility picked ￰12￱ the tech side, Alphabet and Microsoft blew past forecasts.

Google’s ad business and Microsoft’s cloud both pulled heavy weight. meta, on the other hand, rattled investors with its massive capital spending, but the broader Big Tech group still held ￰13￱ strain and weak sentiment cloud outlook But this party isn’t for ￰14￱ selling directly to consumers are feeling the ￰15￱ Patricio, CEO of Kraft Heinz, said holiday sentiment was “one of the worst” he’s seen in decades. McDonald’s reported that more customers are ditching its pricier ￰16￱ Bank pointed out that goods companies, especially those depending on consumer wallets, are dragging behind service‑focused ￰17￱ absence of official job numbers, caused by the government shutdown, made things worse for investors trying to track the labor ￰18￱ alternative indicators, like those from the National Federation of Independent Business, the San Francisco Federal Reserve, and state-level claims, all suggest the job market “is still doing well,” said Torsten Sløk, chief economist at Apollo Global Management.

That’s despite nearly 80,000 layoffs from at least 17 S&P 500 firms, including Amazon, UPS, and Target, since early September, data from Goldman Sachs ￰19￱ University of Michigan’s consumer sentiment index hit a three-year low in ￰20￱ director, Joanne Hsu, said the drop hit across all age groups, income levels, and political ￰21￱ was one exception: people holding large stock ￰22￱ group saw sentiment rise by 11%. Lisa Shalett, chief investment officer at Morgan Stanley Wealth Management, said the top 40% of earners now hold 85% of the country’s wealth, and two-thirds of that wealth is tied directly to ￰23￱ equities up over 90% in the past three years, Lisa warned that “forecasting the labour market may increasingly be less important than forecasting the direction of the stock market itself in order to understand consumption levels.” Join a premium crypto trading community free for 30 days - normally $100/mo.

Cryptopolitan logo
Cryptopolitan

Latest news and analysis from Cryptopolitan

US Firms Post Strong Q3 Earnings Growth Despite Trump Trade War Pressures

US Firms Post Strong Q3 Earnings Growth Despite Trump Trade War Pressures

Corporate earnings in the U.S. surged 11% year over year in Q3, marking the fastest growth in four years despite Donald Trump’s trade war pressures. Companies across multiple sectors absorbed...

CoinOtag logoCoinOtag
1 min
Central Bank of Brazil Clarifies Drex CBDC Project’s Future: Digital Real Still the ‘Ultimate Goal’

Central Bank of Brazil Clarifies Drex CBDC Project’s Future: Digital Real Still the ‘Ultimate Goal’

The Central Bank of Brazil said the recent pause in using blockchain for drex, its central bank digital currency project, is temporary. The bank intends to continue using decentralized technology in t...

Bitcoin.com logoBitcoin.com
1 min
Italian Banks Back ECB Digital Euro, Urge Multi-Year Cost Spread

Italian Banks Back ECB Digital Euro, Urge Multi-Year Cost Spread

Italian banks support the ECB’s digital euro project for digital sovereignty but urge spreading implementation costs over several years to ease the financial burden on the sector. The ECB aims...

CoinOtag logoCoinOtag
1 min