Stocks to watch this week: Oracle, Broadcom, Inditex, British American Tobacco and TUI

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The calendar of earnings releases is looking lighter for the week ahead but there is still a broad range of companies set to report.

Kicking the week's earnings off is Oracle, with investors hoping to see a boost from the company's partnerships with other tech giants.

Chipmaker Broadcom's report will be closely monitored by markets, as escalating trade tensions between the US and China present headwinds for the sector.

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Markets will want to see if Spanish retail company Inditex, whose brands include high-street favourites Zara and Bershka, can continue its run of strong growth.

Investors will be looking to British American Tobacco's trading update to see how the business is performing as the sector faces increasing regulatory pressures.

In the travel sector, markets will be waiting to see if TUI can match, or even beat, its earnings guidance for the year.

Here's more on what to look for:

Oracle (ORCL) —Reports second quarter earnings on Monday 9 December

Shares in enterprise-computing giant Oracle hit a record high last month, with the stock now up 77% year-to-date, giving the stock a market valuation of $516bn (£404bn).

This has helped drive the net worth of its co-founder and chief technology officer Larry Ellison higher. He has a more than 40% stake in the company, according to Business Insider. Forbes real-time billionaires list shows that Ellison is currently the third-richest person in the world, with an estimated net worth of $229.4bn.

Oracle shares climbed after the company posted better-than-expected results in September for its fiscal first quarter.

Adjusted revenue of $13.31bn beat analyst forecasts of $13.26bn, while adjusted earnings of $1.39 came in ahead of estimates of $1.33.

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Oracle also announced partnerships with fellow tech giants Amazon (AMZN) and Google (GOOG, GOOGL) on the same day that the results were published.

Speaking to Yahoo Finance at the time, Moor Insights & Strategy founder, CEO, and chief analyst Patrick Moorhead said that as AI becomes more of a priority, this data will be the company's biggest play.

"The biggest obstruction from enterprises going hardcore into AI is the data problem," he said. "It's getting the data right. It's co-mingling the right data to give generative AI the right solutions without leaking confidential information."

For certain customers, Moorhead said this meant that "Oracle is the place to go. So they will be the data broker for the generative AI age."