Tariffs remain in focus as earnings season continues to wind down, but there are still a number of key companies due to report in the coming week.
On the back of a strong set of results from chipmaking giant Nvidia (NVDA), attention will now turn to rival Broadcom (AVGO), which is due to report on Thursday.
Athletics wear company Lululemon (LULU) is also due to report on Thursday, with focus on its outlook for the current year, after guidance offered at the end of the last financial year failed to impress investors.
In London, investors will want to see if British American Tobacco (BATS.L) has continued to generate sales growth from its new categories business, which includes vapes and heated products.
Investors will also be keen to see how Dr Martens (DOCS.L) turnaround efforts are progressing when the iconic bootmaker reports its full-year results on Thursday.
On the Paris bourse, Rémy Cointreau's (RCO.PA) full-year performance will be in focus, ahead of a new CEO taking the helm at the French spirits company later in June.
Here's more on what to look out for:
Shares in Nvidia (NVDA) jumped after it reported another blowout quarter on Wednesday, despite the company warning of the impact of export controls that limit its ability to ship products to China.
The chipmaker posted revenue of $44.1bn (£32.7bn) for the first quarter, beating expectations of $43.3bn, though earnings per share of $0.81 came in below estimates of $0.93.
Derren Nathan, head of equity analysis at Hargreaves Lansdown, said: “The first key takeaway from Nvidia's (NVDA) Q1 print was that demand for accelerated computing remains extremely strong due to the lightning speed roll out of AI. The second is that Nvidia remains the dominant force in this market.”
“However, with McKinsey predicting a spend of around $7tn to help data centres keep pace with processing demands out to 2030, the market is big enough to accommodate more than just one player,” he added. “Broadcom’s (AVGO) custom ASIC chips can help hyperscalers lower their average cost of data processing and as such it looks well set to grow its share of the market.”
Read more: What's behind the surge in AI-related lawsuits?
Nathan said that consensus forecasts for Broadcom's (AVGO) second quarter revenue are broadly in line with the company's guidance of approximately $14.9bn, which works out to growth of around 19%.
He highlighted that artificial intelligence (AI) is a “growing share of Broadcom’s (AVGO) revenue base but there’s still more sales coming from non-AI workloads leaving the company exposed to cyclical ups and downs, which is a risk in today’s macroeconomic environment. And with 20% of revenue coming from China, markets will be keen to hear the potential impact of export restrictions and tariffs.”