Dow Futures Fall 280 Pts; Tech Giants Head Up Earnings Deluge By Investing.com


© Reuters.

By Peter Nurse    

Investing.com — U.S. stocks are seen opening lower Monday at the start of a week that includes preliminary data on first quarter growth as well as earnings reports from a number of tech titans.

At 7 AM ET (1100 GMT), the contract was down 280 points, or 0.8%, traded 40 points, or 0.9%, lower and dropped 120 points, or 0.9%.

The three main Wall Street indices have seen selling over the last month as investors adjusted for the Federal Reserve’s hawkish pivot, with Chairman Jerome Powell last week largely cementing a 50-basis-point rate hike at the central bank’s next meeting in early May.

The blue-chip closed Friday almost 1000 points, or 2.8%, lower, its worst day since October 2020, resulting in its fourth consecutive losing week. The broad-based fell 2.8% on Friday and the tech-heavy dropped 2.6%.

The U.S. is scheduled to release preliminary first-quarter growth figures later this week against a background of concerns over whether the Fed can engineer a soft landing for the economy as it tries to curb soaring inflation.

The number, released on Thursday, is expected to slow sharply to 1.1% from 6.9% in the final quarter of 2021.

Almost 180 companies listed on the S&P 500 are due to report results in the coming week, including the four largest U.S. companies by market capitalization: Apple (NASDAQ:), Microsoft (NASDAQ:), Amazon (NASDAQ:) and Google-parent Alphabet (NASDAQ:).

First quarter expectations are muted, with the disappointing Netflix (NASDAQ:) subscriber numbers exacerbating concerns about earnings in the tech sector.

Soft drinks giant Coca-Cola (NYSE:) heads up the earnings slate Monday, but the likes of Activision Blizzard (NASDAQ:), Otis (NYSE:) and Whirlpool (NYSE:) are also scheduled to report.

Twitter (NYSE:) will also be in the spotlight following reports that the social media platform’s board has started discussions with Tesla (NASDAQ:) CEO Elon Musk about a possible sale. If confirmed, that would represent an abrupt change of mind given the company was very quick to turn down Musk’s $43 billion bid last week.

Oil prices slumped to near two-week lows Monday on increased concerns that the spreading COVID outbreak in China, the world’s largest importer of crude, will stunt demand.

By 7 AM ET, futures traded 4.5% lower at $97.4 a barrel, while the contract fell 4.4% to $101.52. Both benchmarks dropped around 5% last week, and have now fallen to levels last seen on April 12.

Additionally, fell 1.2% to $1,911.20/oz, while traded 0.6% lower at 1.0727.

 

 

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