2026년 2월 24일 · Unknown · financial · 출처 Yahoo Finance
US stock futures wavered on Tuesday, struggling to recover from steep losses led by fears of AI disruption as President Trump's new global tariff came into effect.
Dow Jones Industrial Average futures (YM=F) hovered just above the flatline, losing hold of earlier slight premarket gains. Contracts on the S&P 500 (ES=F) slipped into the red, while Nasdaq 100 futures (NQ=F) added 0.2%.
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The cautious rebound follows a sharp sell-off on Monday as investors grappled with renewed concerns that rapid advances in AI could disrupt broad swaths of corporate America. The blue-chip Dow (^DJI) led the slump, which pushed the Nasdaq Composite (^IXIC) and S&P 500 (^GSPC).
That puts the spotlight on Anthropic's (ANTH.PVT) virtual event on Tuesday morning, featuring updates to its AI tools and Claude chatbot for companies. Wall Street is on watch after the AI start-up's recent product reveals hit sectors from software to consulting services, with IBM the latest victim.
On the upside of AI, shares of AMD (AMD) jumped about 10% after the chipmaker entered a deal to provide Meta (META) with a huge amount of GPUs for the Facebook owner's AI buildout.
Meanwhile, worries of revived trade war are still keeping markets on edge, after President Trump's new 10% global tariff took effect on Tuesday at 10%. The move has thrown existing trade deals into doubt, after EU and Japan protested that the duties leave them worse off than agreed.
According to several reports, the White House is now working on a formal order to raise the rate to 15%, as threatened by Trump, and is preparing plans to launch national-security probes on sectoral imports that could lead to more tariffs. Given that, investors will listen closely to Trump's State of the Union address later Tuesday for hints on his trade policy as he lays out his view of the economy.
The latest consumer confidence data due later is also in focus after the January Conference Board print showed Americans were at their most gloomy about the economy since 2014.LIVE6 updates
38 mins ago
Jenny McCall
Premarket trending tickers: Whirlpool, Keysight Technology, and Planet Fitness
Whirlpool (WHR) stock fell 8% before the bell on Tuesday after the Wall Street Journal reported that the appliance maker plans to sell 800 million shares to pay off its debt.
Keysight Technologies, Inc. (KEYS) stock jumped 15% before the bell after it beat analysts' expectations for its first quarter earnings and released an upbeat fiscal second-quarter outlook.
Planet Fitness (PLNT) stock fell 5% during premarket hours on Tuesday following the release of its fourth quarter earnings. The fitness operator beat revenue estimates, but saw its stock price fall before market open. 56 mins ago
Brooke DiPalma
Home Depot stock rises after same-store sales growth beat
Home Depot (HD) posted mixed fourth quarter results as consumer uncertainty around the housing market lingers.
In the fourth quarter, revenue fell 4% to $38.2 billion, slightly less than nearly $38.3 billion the street forecasted, per Bloomberg consensus data. Adjusted earnings came in better than expected at $2.72 per share, compared with estimates of $2.55.
Overall same-store sales grew 0.4%, compared to the expected 0.4% decline. The results were driven by a higher ticket size, but drop off in consumer transactions.
"For the fourth quarter, our results were largely in-line with our expectations, reflecting the lack of storm activity in the third quarter and ongoing consumer uncertainty and pressure in housing," CEO Ted Decker said in the release, "Adjusting for storms, underlying demand was relatively stable throughout the year."
Home Depot stock rose nearly 3% in premarket trading. Shares are up roughly 10% so far this year. For comparison, the S&P 500 (^GSPC) has been flat.
For the fiscal year, the company posted better than expected results across all key metrics.
Revenue came in at $164.68 billion, more than the $164.59 billion expected, alongside adjusted earnings of $14.69, a tick above the $14.53 expected.
Same-store sales grew 0.3%, more than the 0.2% Wall Street anticipated.
For this fiscal year, the company reiterated guidnce it shared at its investor day back in December. It expects total sales to grow in the range of 2.5% to 4.5%, alongside same-store sales growth of roughly flat to up 2%.
Adjusted earnings for the year are expected to be between flat and up 4.0% from $14.69 posted this fiscal year. Today at 11:12 AM UTC
Brian Sozzi
Home Depot CFO on the state of the US housing market
It was a decent quarter, all things considered, for Home Depot (HD).
It offered a reasonable EPS outlook for 2026, given the tepid state of the US housing market.
Here's what Home Depot CFO Richard McPhail had to say on that, speaking to me this morning. Today at 11:00 AM UTC
Karen Friar
Bitcoin heads for worst month since crypto collapse of June 2022
Bitcoin (BTC-USD) continued to slump, on track to log its biggest monthly fall since a flurry of big corporate collapses shook the crypto world almost four years ago.
The leading cryptocurrency dropped to $62,858 at one point, but recouped some losses to trade above $63,000 on Tuesday morning.
From Bloomberg:
Read more here. Today at 9:23 AM UTC
Grace O'Donnell
Hims & Hers forecasts 2026 revenue above estimates, but the stock is down
Hims & Hers (HIMS) reported lower profits in the fourth quarter compared with a year ago, sending the stock down more than 5% in premarket trading.
The telehealth and drug platform reported earnings per share of $0.08, beating Wall Street estimates for $0.05 but falling from $0.11 per share a year ago, according to S&P Global Market Intelligence. Revenue of $617.8 million was roughly in line with estimates.
One bright spot in the earnings release was Hims & Hers 2026 revenue forecast,…