Don’t let this busy earnings week slip by your radar
|With geopolitics and macro headlines dominating attention this week, it can be easy to miss the real market drivers in equities.
We’ve got 451 earnings reports landing across three sessions:
- Tuesday: 116 earnings.
- Wednesday: 138 earnings.
- Thursday: 160 earnings.
That’s a dense wave of corporate updates hitting the market in a short period of time.
When that much information flows through at once, sentiment can shift quietly, due to a tone shift across sectors.
Let’s see which names are worth paying more attention to this week.
Largest companies by market cap to watch
Below are the key names worth watching closely this week, along with what their numbers imply for their respective sectors.
Why these three matter
HSBC gives you a macro read through financials. Banks sit at the centre of credit conditions. If margins are steady and loan demand holds, it reinforces economic resilience. If commentary turns cautious, risk appetite can soften quickly.
Walmart acts as a consumer barometer. When shoppers trade down, when margins compress, when management hints at slower foot traffic, equity markets pay attention. Consumer spending still drives the U.S. economy.
Alibaba is your China pulse. With earnings expected to drop sharply year on year, the market is already braced for softness. If results stabilise or guidance improves, that can spill into emerging markets, commodities and broader risk assets.
For today: HSBC one-hour chart analysis
The HSBC chart remains in a short-term downtrend after breaking below its February 6th low. However, pre-market pricing near $88 places the stock right around the 61.8 Fib retracement level.
That is constructive in the sense that buyers are attempting to reclaim lost ground quickly, but $88.18 acts as immediate resistance. Price is essentially opening into a technical ceiling rather than clean air.
At the same time, the 1H Stochastic RSI is already in overbought territory, which suggests momentum may need to cool before any sustained move higher.
Overall, the pre-market tone is encouraging and aligns with the stronger earnings outlook for financials, but with price opening directly at resistance, some caution is warranted until a clear break and hold above that level is seen.
Walmart one-hour chart analysis
Walmart is expected to open around $128.90, placing it back inside its recent consolidation range despite the broader downside pressure seen previously.
For now, the stock is not trending decisively. It is moving sideways within defined levels, which makes structure more important than momentum.
- Key support: $126.88 previous low. Break below confirms further downside.
- Mid-range pivot: $129.40 acts as support/resistance. Acceptance above strengthens short-term tone.
- Range high: $131.76. A clean break above shifts structure toward recovery.
Overall, today’s pre-market strength aligns with stable EPS expectations, but the real test will be whether price can hold above the mid-range pivot and avoid revisiting the prior low.
Alibaba one-hour chart analysis
Alibaba is trading within a clear short-term downtrend, with price continuing to respect a descending trendline from the late January highs. The recent selloff found support near the 78.6% Fibonacci retracement around $152.80, where buyers stepped in and triggered a bounce. That level now acts as the key downside reference. A break below it would expose the $145 region, which aligns with the 100% retracement.
Price is currently attempting to stabilise around the mid-$150s, but structure remains weak unless the descending trendline and the $157–$160 zone are reclaimed. That area acts as immediate resistance and will likely attract sellers on the first test.
Momentum on the 1H is deeply oversold, which supports the case for a short-term relief bounce. However, until higher highs start forming, this move should be viewed as recovery within a broader downtrend.
Overall, Alibaba is technically fragile, but sitting at a meaningful Fib support level where short-term buyers may attempt to defend; and additionally, consolidating within a potential falling wedge.
Bottom line
Across sectors, the setup is clear.
- Financials are expected to improve.
- Consumerism remains stable but not booming.
- China’s growth is assumed to be weaker.
This week isn’t just about beats and misses. It’s about whether those assumptions hold. If they do, markets continue rotating calmly. If they don’t, volatility picks up without needing any new geopolitical trigger.
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