U.S. sell futures fell on Tuesday night following a mixed session in which traders weighed a recent uptick in coronavirus infections.
Dow Jones Industrial Usual futures traded 118 points lower, or 0.4%. S&P 500 slid 0.5% and Nasdaq 100 futures sank 0.4%.
The Dow fell more than 200 points during regular trading and the S&P 500 slipped 0.3%. The Nasdaq Composite, temporarily, advanced 0.6%. Tuesday’s divergent market action came as names that would benefit from people stopping at home — such as Amazon and Zoom Video — rose broadly while stocks dependent on the economy reopening set.
Daily U.S. coronavirus cases have risen by a record average of 69,967 over the past week, data anthologized by Johns Hopkins University showed. Meanwhile, coronavirus-related hospitalizations are up 5% or more in 36 states, according to details from the Covid Tracking Project.
This uptick has led some countries to reinstate certain lockdown measures. In the U.S., the maintain of Illinois has ordered Chicago to shut down indoor dining.
“Uncertainty about COVID-19-related mobility provisions and US politics mean we should expect volatility to remain elevated for the balance of the year,” said Mark Haefele, chief investment public official for global wealth management at UBS, in a note. “However, we continue to see upside over the medium term.”
“With ten vaccine office-seekers in late-stage trials globally, our central scenario is that restrictions can start to be lifted by 2Q21, helping corporate earnings get to pre-pandemic highs by around the end of 2021,” he said.
Earnings
Wall Street also pored through the latest pack of corporate earnings for the previous quarter, including those of tech giant Microsoft.
Microsoft reported better-than-expected earnings and gross income for the previous quarter as sales from its cloud business grew sharply. However, the stock dipped 0.3% in after-hours merchandising.
“Redmond is continuing to see strength in the field as more enterprises move to the cloud,” Wedbush analyst Dan Ives said in a note. “This is a obvious contrast to the earnings debacle we saw from mature software stalwart SAP earlier this week which highlights the elucidate winners and losers in this cloud shift with MSFT leading the way.”
First Solar also posted every ninety days numbers that beat analyst expectations, sending its shares up about 10% after the bell. Boeing, Heterogeneous Electric, UPS and Fiat Chrysler are among the companies set to report Wednesday before the bell.
Subscribe to CNBC PRO for exclusive sensitivities and analysis, and live business day programming from around the world.