Investors tracking NYSE stocks this week should monitor the earnings reports from major banks (JPM, GS, WFC, C), essential consumer retailers (ACI, DPZ), and innovative tech firms while considering income opportunities from top dividend payers. Earnings will shape trader and investor sentiment in financials and key sectors like technology and consumer discretionary during this peak reporting period.
NYSE Stocks Reporting Quarterly Earnings Today and This Week
Other notable reports this week: 3M (MMM), Philip Morris (PM), Verizon (VZ), AT&T (T), IBM (IBM), and Tesla (TSLA) have earnings intervals in the coming days.
JPMorgan Chase (JPM) beat most earnings estimates but with cautious credit loss provisioning.
Wells Fargo (WFC) raised profitability targets despite slight revenue misses.
Goldman Sachs (GS) saw notable trading revenues and investment banking performance.
Citigroup (C) reports with a focus on revenue mix and credit metrics.
Albertsons Companies (ACI) showed strong performance in retail and grocery segments.
VinFast Auto Ltd. (VFS) results are closely watched as an EV startup.
Hancock Whitney Corporation (HWC) is a regional bank delivering steady earnings.
Karooooo Ltd. (KARO) is a niche technology player.
Stocks Hitting 52-Week Highs
D-Wave Quantum (QBTS): 52-week high of $41.97, showcasing strong momentum in AI and quantum computing themes. Rare Earth ETF (REMX): Achieved a 52-week high, surging 136% from its low, as U.S.-China tensions and export curbs on rare metals continue to push the sector higher. D-Wave Quantum (QBTS): fresh 52-week high of $41.97, showcasing strong momentum in AI and quantum computing themes.Rare Earth ETF (REMX): 52-week high, surging 136% from its low, as U.S.-China tensions and export curbs on rare metals continue to push the sector higher.
Top dividend paying NYSE stocks with clickable links on the stock names
- Oxford Square Capital Corp. — Yielding around 19.09%
- Horizon Technology Finance Corp. — Yielding approximately 18.97%
- Prospect Capital Corp. — Yielding roughly 18.75%
- Armour Residential REIT Inc. — At 18.43%
- Whitehorse Finance Inc. — Approximately 17.72%
- Investcorp Credit Management BDC Inc. — Yielding 16.44%
- B&G Foods Inc. — At 16.34%
- OFS Capital Corp. — Yielding 15.70%
- FS KKR Capital Corp. — Around 15.53%
- BlackRock TCP Capital Corp. — At 13.93%
These are among the highest dividend yielding stocks on the NYSE as of September 2025, providing income investors with attractive yield opportunities.
Takeaways for Investors
- The NYSE is seeing momentum around bank earnings, resilient consumer sectors, and tech innovation—including quantum computing.
- Watch for volatility around banks as they disclose credit loss provisions and guidance; consumer demand is supporting select retailers and services.
- 52-week highs are concentrated in energy transition, rare earth, and advanced tech themes, which may offer growth but can be volatile.
- High dividend yield stocks present options for income investors, though due diligence is required to assess payout sustainability.
What to Expect from Investors
In portfolio theory, investor behavior often demonstrates both underreaction and overreaction to new information, impacting stock prices and returns. The overreaction hypothesis, supported by DeBondt and Thaler (1985), suggests that investors overweight recent news and overadjust their expectations, causing price reversals where past “loser” stocks outperform and “winner” stocks underperform in subsequent periods. Conversely, investor underreaction reflects a slower adjustment to new public information, where stocks show a momentum effect or drift after earnings announcements or dividend changes due to gradual incorporation of information. The Post-Earnings-Announcement-Drift (1988) model documents such stocksì prices drift, where stock prices continue to move in the direction of earnings surprises over weeks or months, indicating underreaction. The Fama-French asset pricing models incorporate multiple risk factors which can explain some of this behavior, attributing patterns of returns partially to systematic risks but also leaving room for behavioral biases like investor sentiment and mispricing. These theories collectively suggest that despite rational risk considerations, investor psychology like overconfidence, limited attention, and representativeness bias drive anomalies such as stock price momentum after dividends and earnings, challenging market efficiency assumptions. Thus, investor underreaction and overreaction are central to understanding stock drift before and after earnings and dividend events, influencing portfolio strategies that exploit these anomalies for abnormal returns