Stock Markets April 27, 2026 08:10 AM

TSX Futures Slip as Geopolitics and a Heavy Earnings Calendar Loom

Markets head into a jam-packed week of corporate results and central bank decisions while tensions around the Strait of Hormuz keep oil prices elevated

By Ajmal Hussain MSFT
TSX Futures Slip as Geopolitics and a Heavy Earnings Calendar Loom
MSFT

Futures tied to Canada’s principal equity gauge moved lower Monday as investors prepared for a week loaded with quarterly earnings, central bank guidance and persistent geopolitical tensions between the U.S. and Iran that have disrupted crude flows through the Strait of Hormuz. U.S. contracts were mixed, oil prices rose and gold remained subdued ahead of a key Federal Reserve decision.

Key Points

  • TSX futures were down modestly by 2 points, or 0.1%, by 07:58 ET as markets prepared for a packed week of earnings and policy decisions.
  • Geopolitical tensions between the U.S. and Iran continue to influence markets after the effective closure of the Strait of Hormuz; Iran reportedly offered to lift the closure via a proposal relayed through Pakistan.
  • A heavy corporate reporting schedule, including roughly 35% of S&P 500 companies and large AI-investing mega-caps, and a Fed meeting expected to keep rates unchanged are key near-term market catalysts.

Futures referencing Canada’s main equity benchmark opened lower on Monday as market participants braced for a heavy corporate reporting slate, central bank decisions and continuing geopolitical friction tied to the U.S.-Iran confrontation.

By 07:58 ET (11:58 GMT), the S&P/TSX 60 index standard futures contract had eased 2 points, or 0.1%.

The S&P/TSX composite index ended the previous session down 0.03% at 33,904.11 on Friday, closing a week that saw the benchmark fall 1.3% and break a four-week run of gains.

Across the border, U.S. equity futures offered a mixed picture as traders positioned for an unusually busy week that will feature not only policy decisions from central banks but also a flood of quarterly results from major companies, including technology names investing heavily in artificial intelligence initiatives.

At 07:52 ET, Dow futures had slipped 53 points, or about 0.1%, S&P 500 futures were essentially flat, and Nasdaq 100 futures were up 45 points, or 0.2%.

On Friday the main U.S. averages closed in mixed fashion: the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq Composite advanced while the Dow Jones Industrial Average lagged.


Geopolitical developments remained a primary market influence. Sentiment toward equities received a lift late last week from the prospect of renewed talks between the U.S. and Iran aimed at ending their roughly two-month war and reopening the Strait of Hormuz, a strategic maritime chokepoint that channels a substantial share of global oil shipments.

Over the weekend, however, U.S. President Donald Trump canceled plans to send American negotiators to Pakistan for fresh discussions with Iran, signaling that the practical closure of the strait could persist. Speaking on Sunday, Trump said Tehran could "call me" if it wanted to pursue talks and reiterated that Washington holds "all the cards." He added, "If they want to talk, they can come to us, or they can call us."

Media reports on Monday said Iran has proposed ending its effective closure of the Strait of Hormuz without addressing its nuclear program, and that Tehran was seeking an end to the U.S. naval blockade of Iranian ports. The proposal was reportedly relayed to Washington via Pakistan. It was not clear whether the offer would be accepted by President Trump. Two regional officials were cited for the account, and another outlet was said to have been first to report aspects of the proposal.


Oil markets reacted to the uncertain diplomatic backdrop. By 07:54 ET, Brent crude futures, the global benchmark, had climbed 1.0% to $106.36 a barrel, while U.S. West Texas Intermediate futures were up 0.7% at $95.10 a barrel.

The persistence of supply disruption risks in the Middle East has supported prices, and that dynamic is feeding through into investor assessments across asset classes heading into a busy policy week.

Against that backdrop, gold traded muted. Spot gold slipped 0.1% to $4,703.20 an ounce, and gold futures were down 0.5% at $4,718.41 per ounce by 08:01 ET as markets awaited the Federal Reserve.


All eyes are on the Fed’s two-day meeting that concludes on Wednesday. The Federal Reserve is widely expected to keep interest rates unchanged, but commentary from the meeting on how policymakers view the economic outlook in the wake of energy-market shocks will be parsed closely.

The coming Fed meeting will be the last under Chair Jerome Powell, whose term expires on May 15. Kevin Warsh, President Trump’s nominee to succeed Powell, testified before Congress last week that he had made no commitments to cut interest rates.

Market participants are particularly attentive to the interplay between interest-rate expectations and asset prices given the changes in energy costs. Gold, as a non-yielding asset, typically performs better in environments where interest-rate expectations ease, a dynamic investors will be watching in real time through Fed commentary and subsequent market moves.


Corporate news is also shaping investor positioning. Verizon shares rose after the telecom operator raised its annual profit guidance and reported unexpected wireless subscriber additions in the first quarter, which management attributed in part to bundled plans and refreshed promotional activity.

The week ahead will be dense with earnings: roughly 35% of the companies in the benchmark S&P 500 are scheduled to report results over the coming days. Attention will center on a clutch of mega-cap technology firms that have been directing substantial capital toward building artificial intelligence capabilities.

"Q1 reporting season has been solid thus far, with the S&P set for a sixth straight quarter of double-digit earnings growth, while enthusiasm towards the tech sector has also made a notable resurgence," said Michael Brown, Senior Research Strategist at Pepperstone, in a note. That renewed enthusiasm in technology will be in sharp focus when results arrive from companies that have been among the largest investors in AI infrastructure and software.

Those capital commitments to AI form a key component of investor narratives that have helped equity markets extend gains in recent weeks despite the headwinds presented by the Iran conflict and related energy-market disruptions.


Investors thus enter the week balancing near-term geopolitical uncertainty, incoming corporate earnings that will test the durability of profit expansion, and central bank guidance that will influence the path of interest rates and, by extension, valuations across interest-sensitive sectors.

Given the convergence of these drivers, market participants are expected to monitor developments across oil markets, big-cap technology results and the Fed’s commentary closely to gauge the next directional move for risk assets.

Risks

  • Prolonged disruption to shipping through the Strait of Hormuz could sustain higher oil prices, impacting energy-sensitive sectors and broader inflation expectations.
  • Uncertainty around the organization and outcome of renewed U.S.-Iran talks - including whether any proposals will be accepted - creates headline risk that can quickly shift investor sentiment.
  • Market reaction to the Fed’s commentary following its meeting could alter interest-rate expectations; this poses risks to rate-sensitive assets including precious metals and high-multiple technology stocks.

More from Stock Markets

Hut 8 project markets investment-grade bonds to fund Google-backed Louisiana data center Apr 27, 2026 Bank of America Sees Dell and HPE Positioned to Gain from Agentic AI’s CPU-Heavy Workloads Apr 27, 2026 India’s central bank requires banks to report offshore rupee derivative activity by group entities Apr 27, 2026 Vinted closes 880 million-euro secondary sale, set at 8 billion-euro valuation Apr 27, 2026 Macquarie-Led Group Nears Sale of Louisiana Utility Cleco for Close to $6 Billion Apr 27, 2026