U.S. stock futures fell early Tuesday as traders braced for the latest batch of corporate earnings reports.
Futures tied to the Dow Jones Industrial Average slipped by 280 points at 5 a.m. ET, or 0.81%. S&P 500 futures fell 1.19%, and Nasdaq 100 futures declined 2%. U.S. markets were closed Monday due to the Martin Luther King holiday.
The shortened trading week will feature quarterly reports from 35 companies in the S&P 500, including Bank of America, UnitedHealth and Netflix. Goldman Sachs is also set to post its most-recent quarterly figures Tuesday before the bell.
Major banks Wells Fargo, JPMorgan Chase and Citigroup kicked off the earnings season on Friday, with the three companies posting better-than-expected profits. However, the market’s reaction to those results was mixed. Wells Fargo shares posted a gain on the back of those results, but JPMorgan Chase and Citigroup slid.
Overall, 26 S&P 500 companies have reported calendar fourth-quarter earnings thus far, according to Refinitiv. Of those companies, nearly 77% posted bottom-line results that beat analyst expectations.
“The economic backdrop to the fourth quarter was positive, boding well for profit and revenue growth,” UBS Global Wealth Management CIO Mark Haefele said in a note last week. “Guidance from companies also looks set to point to continued demand strength in 2022, even if omicron is disrupting some businesses right now.”
The spread of the omicron Covid-19 variant has raised questions over the state of the global economic recovery ever since news of its discovery broke. Some countries and regions reinstated lockdowns and other social distancing measures to curb the outbreak.
However, recent data indicates the spread may be easing. In New York the seven-day average of daily new cases has been falling since hitting a record earlier this month, according to data compiled by Johns Hopkins University. In Maryland, daily infections are down 27% week over week. Cases are also falling in South Africa and the UK.
Rocky start to the year
The latest moves come as equities have struggled to start 2022.
The Dow, S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite are all down for the year amid concerns over the recent inflationary surge and the prospect of tighter monetary policy from the Federal Reserve.
Philadelphia Fed President Patrick Harker told CNBC last week that the central bank could raise rates three or four times this year. He noted that inflation is “more persistent than we thought a while ago.”
Tech, the biggest S&P 500 sector by market cap, has been hit especially hard this year, falling more than 4%. Big Tech names like Meta Platforms, Amazon, Netflix, Alphabet and Apple are all down year to date.
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U.S. stock futures fell early Tuesday as traders braced for the latest batch of corporate earnings reports.