Nasdaq futures dip ahead of Big Tech earnings

FAN Editor

Stock futures declined in the early hours of Tuesday morning after stocks bounced in the afternoon and ahead of Big Tech earnings.

Futures tied to the tech focused Nasdaq index fell 0.6%. Dow Jones Industrial Average futures dipped 0.4% and S&P 500 futures were down almost 0.5%.

In regular trading Monday, the Nasdaq Composite jumped 1.3%. The Dow advanced 0.7%, after cutting a 500-point loss from earlier in the day, and the S&P 500 gained 0.6%.

The moves came as tech names like Microsoft, Alphabet and Meta Platforms rallied in the afternoon, amid falling interest rates and ahead of an intense week of earnings for mega cap tech stocks. Twitter also jumped after its board accepted Tesla CEO Elon Musk’s offer to take it private.

The bounce was welcomed by investors after stocks ended the previous week on a sour note, with the Dow falling to its fourth down week in a row and the S&P and Nasdaq hitting three-week losing streaks Friday. The tech-heavy Nasdaq is attempting to break out of bear market territory, sitting 19.8% from its record.

Whether this is a bottom remains to be seen. Edward Moya, senior market analyst at Oanda, told CNBC there’s still a lot of optimism about the U.S. economy and said he anticipates a relief rally from here.

“A third of the S&P is reporting [earnings] this week, and you’re probably going to see much of the same:  lots of top and bottom line beats. Companies are going to talk about margin pressures and passing on price increases to the consumer, but they’re still going to highlight there’s still overall optimism about the economy.”

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Between the continuation of earnings beats and a quiet period from the Federal Reserve, there will likely be a relief rally in the market, Moya added.

“We’re not going to be getting more nervousness about Fed tightening, because we won’t be hearing much more about it until the May meeting,” he said.

Market bull Tom Lee, head of research at Fundstrat Global Advisors, said even though he’d expected a “treacherous” first half to the year, the market has been worse than even he expected, with inflation worsening relative to market expectations. Nevertheless, he remains optimistic.

“When the bond market is screaming for Fed to be a bit tighter, it’s tough for stocks to hold up and I think that’s what we’re kind of going through now, but, I don’t think that means that we should be selling equities here either,” he said on CNBC’s “Closing Bell: Overtime” Monday.

“Markets just want to have some sense of when this could end,” he added. “If inflation doesn’t reach some sort of apex that’s concerning for markets, but I also don’t think it’s set in stone that inflation is going to continue to be a problem even in the second half.”

Tech earnings will kick off on Tuesday after the bell with Alphabet and Microsoft. Meta, Amazon and Apple will report later in the week. UPS and 3M are also scheduled to report in the morning.

In economic data, investors are expecting fresh numbers for new home sales and consumer confidence on Tuesday morning.

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