Weekly Global Market News– May–Week 3
Weekly Global Market News – May -Week – 3 The Week Ahead: Markets, Macro and Movers (week of May 18, 2026) A powerful mix of AI-led tech spending, consumer bellwethers and pivotal inflation updates will steer risk appetite this week. Below is your concise roadmap, with the key catalysts, why they matter, and what to watch for in prices and positioning. Top 5 things to watch 1) Nvidia earnings (Wed) and AI capex pulse Why it matters: Nvidia’s results have become the proxy for AI infrastructure demand and cloud capex cycles. What to watch: Data center revenue trajectory and visibility on H200/B100 ramps Networking (InfiniBand vs Ethernet) backlog and supply tightness Gross margin sustainability and any mix shift Customer concentration and hyperscaler capex commentary Competitive landscape (AMD/Intel responses) and software moat (CUDA ecosystem) Market read-through: AI suppliers (chips, memory, power, cooling), cloud platforms, semicap, edge computing, and power utilities. 2) US big-box retail and the consumer check-up Who’s reporting: Home Depot (Tue), Lowe’s, Target (Wed), Walmart (Thu), plus Ross Stores, Ralph Lauren and others. What to watch: Traffic and comparable sales, with mix between essentials and discretionary E-commerce penetration vs store productivity; omnichannel margins Inventory and shrink trends; promotions vs price discipline Labor and freight cost commentary; FY guidance updates Market read-through: US consumption resilience, real wage pass-through, goods disinflation vs services stickiness, and the “soft landing” narrative. 3) UK retail and services Marks & Spencer (Wed) alongside British Land, Experian; later in the week BT Group, Sage, easyJet and others. What to watch: M&S margin mix (food vs clothing & home), digital execution, and free cash flow UK services demand signals and capex intentions from corporates Market read-through: UK domestic equities, sterling rate expectations and consumer cyclicals. 4) Inflation and growth data: UK, Eurozone, Japan, China, Canada UK CPI/PPI (Wed), Eurozone HICP (Wed), Germany PPI (Wed), Japan Q1 GDP (Tue) and CPI (Fri), Canada CPI (Tue), China April activity (Mon) and rates decision (Wed). What to watch: UK core/services inflation momentum ahead of BoE cuts pricing Eurozone core disinflation vs PMIs (Thu) to gauge growth-inflation mix Japan growth wobble vs sticky inflation into the BoJ’s normalization path China retail sales/industrial output tone and any policy rate tweak Market read-through: Gilts and sterling; bunds and euro; JGBs and yen; China-sensitive commodities and EM FX. 5) Fed minutes (Wed) and global PMIs (Thu) Fed minutes: Any color on inflation patience, QT and the bar for cuts. Flash PMIs (US, Eurozone, UK, Japan, others): Momentum check on manufacturing and services. Corporate diary: highlights and “what to listen for” Tuesday Home Depot (Q1): Pro demand vs DIY; big-ticket elasticity; inventory normalization. Shell AGM: Capital returns, low-carbon spend discipline and methane targets. Euronext, DCC, Diploma, Amer Sports, Keysight, SSP, Currys, Cranswick, Topps Tiles: Europe/UK consumer and industrial snapshots. Wednesday Nvidia (Q1): AI infrastructure demand and supply cadence; see Top 5. Target (Q1): Mix shift, traffic, own brands; loss prevention updates. Lowe’s (Q1): DIY health vs contractor activity; margin levers. Marks & Spencer (FY): Category momentum and cash returns. Intuit (Q3): SMB demand, TurboTax attach and AI features monetization. British Land, Experian, Severn Trent, Analog Devices, Hasbro, Toll Brothers, Bloomsbury, Keller, Tokio Marine. Thursday Walmart (Q1): Grocery share gains, general merchandise rebound, marketplace/ads growth, automation productivity. Deere (Q1): Ag cycle durability, dealer inventories, precision ag adoption. BT Group (FY): Fiber rollout economics, cost-out, dividend stance. Sage (HY): Cloud subscriptions trajectory and margins. easyJet (HY): Summer pricing, capacity discipline, fuel hedging. Take-Two (Q4/FY): Pipeline visibility and live services monetization. Deckers, Ralph Lauren, Ross Stores, AJ Bell, Close Brothers (update), QinetiQ, Tate & Lyle, Nordson, Nationwide Building Society, Singtel, Zoom. Friday Richemont (FY): China demand, jewelry vs watches mix, wholesale vs DTC. Macro diary: at a glance Monday China: April retail sales and industrial output Switzerland: Q1 GDP estimate UK: IMF Article IV; consumer sentiment and labor market outlook indicators Canada: Victoria Day (markets closed) Events: Nvidia CEO speaking at Dell Technologies World; BoE MPC speakers Tuesday Canada: CPI Japan: Q1 GDP (advance) Germany: Q1 labor market stats UK: Labor market report; flash productivity; insolvencies Events: Google I/O developer conference opens Earnings: Home Depot and others (see above) Wednesday China: Policy rate announcement Eurozone: Final HICP (Apr) UK: CPI/PPI (Apr) Germany: PPI (Apr) US: FOMC minutes Earnings: Nvidia, Target, Lowe’s, Marks & Spencer, Intuit, ADI, British Land, Experian, more Thursday Flash PMIs: Eurozone, France, Germany, UK, US, Japan, India Australia: Labor force report (Apr) France: Retail sales (Mar) UK: BRC Consumer Sentiment Earnings: Walmart, BT Group, Deere, easyJet, Sage, Take-Two, Ross, Ralph Lauren, more Friday UK: Retail sales (GB), public sector finances (Apr), GfK consumer confidence Germany: Q1 GDP estimate Japan: CPI (Apr) France: Business climate survey (May) US: Conference Board Leading Index Earnings: Richemont Policy, politics and notable events UK: New BBC director-general Matt Brittin takes office (Mon); BoE Governor appears before the Treasury Committee (Wed); immigration statistics (Thu); RHS Chelsea Flower Show (Tue–Sat). US: Primary contests in Alabama, Georgia, Idaho, Kentucky, Oregon, Pennsylvania (Tue) ahead of November midterms. Europe: Cannes Film Festival concludes (Sat); French Open begins (Sun). Nordics: Sweden hosts a high-level NATO-related visit (Thu). Asia: Hong Kong’s Cheung Chau Bun Festival kicks off (Thu). Americas: EU–Mexico summit in Mexico City (Fri). India/Europe: India’s Prime Minister visits Norway then Italy early week. What it could mean for markets Equities Tech/AI: Positioning is crowded into AI winners; strong prints could extend momentum but raise “too hot” rate fears. Supply chain beneficiaries (memory, high-end networking, power equipment) remain in focus. Retail: A bifurcated consumer likely persists. Essentials-led strength supports big-box stalwarts; discretionary and home improvement remain rate-sensitive. Watch margin commentary for relief rallies. Europe/UK: Services resilience with easing inflation is a sweet spot; beats on PMIs could favor domestics and financials. Rates and FX UK CPI downside surprise would firm BoE cut bets, pressuring gilt yields and potentially the pound; sticky services would do the opposite. Eurozone disinflation plus soft PMIs would support bunds; EUR direction hinges on US data and Fed minutes tone. Japan: