Unlock stock picks and a broker-level newsfeed that powers Wall Street.

Stocks to watch this week: Nvidia, Prudential, CrowdStrike and Foot Locker

In This Article:

Earnings season is winding down but investors will still have plenty to watch this week as key companies across various sectors provide updates that could offer valuable insights into market trends.

In the tech sector, AI darling Nvidia is expected to offer a glimpse into the ongoing impact of the artificial intelligence (AI) hype on the semiconductor industry, potentially revealing whether enthusiasm for AI is translating into tangible growth.

Meanwhile in London, financial services firm Prudential will show investors if it has managed to turn around its performance. Shares in the company have slumped amid less than stellar performance of the Hong Kong and China economies.

CrowdStrike will also report its results in the cybersecurity arena, with investors eager to see how the company behind the recent global outage is performing.

In the sneaker fashion world, Foot Locker is seeing analysts upgrading its stock ahead of earnings but Wall Street still expects a quarterly loss.

Here's what to look out for:

Nvidia (NVDA) — Reports second-quarter results on Wednesday 28 August

All eyes will be on Nvidia (NVDA) this week, as the chip giant at the heart of the AI boom, is set to release its second-quarter results on 28 August.

Not only does Nvidia hold an 80% to 95% share of the market for high-powered AI chips, according to Reuters, but it is also the world’s third-largest company by market capitalisation at $3.04tn (£2.31tn), having briefly held the top spot back in June.

The AI darling is the single best performer in the S&P 500 (^GSPC) index and a leading member of the Philadelphia Semiconductor index — known as the SOX (SOX=F) — point out AJ Bell’s head of financial analysis Danni Hewson and Dan Coatsworth, investment analyst for the platform.

Nvidia is also part of the so-called 'Magnificent Seven', which alongside other tech heavyweights including Apple (AAPL) and Microsoft (MSFT), is a group of stocks that make up more than a third of the S&P 500’s stock market value and a fifth of the FTSE All-World (AW01.FGI) equity index’s market capitalisation.

“These seven names have gone a long way to helping equity markets go higher, so if they stumble then the effects could be felt widely,” say Hewson and Coatsworth.

Nvidia shares are up 149.87% year-to-date, though the stock sold off heavily in July and into early August. The share price has recovered some ground since then but fell 3% in Thursday’s trading session ahead of the highly anticipated earnings report next week.

Read more: FTSE 100 LIVE: European stocks advance as UK energy price cap rises to £1,717