in

Stock futures are mixed as investors consider Tuesday’s sharp losses, earnings reports

U.S. stock futures were mixed on Tuesday night after the major averages continued their April sell-off amid concerns of an economic slowdown, and Wall Street considered earnings that came in after the bell.

Dow Jones Industrial Average futures rose 65 points, or 0.2%. S&P 500 futures were flat. Nasdaq 100 futures declined 0.3%.

Major tech stocks continued their declines in after hours trading. Alphabet’s stock price dropped more than 4% after the company reported earnings. Shares for Meta Platform, which is reporting earnings on Wednesday, dropped 4%.

Meanwhile, shares of Robinhood also dropped more than 5% in extended trading after the retail brokerage said it is cutting back on staff. The company cited “duplicate roles and job functions” after its rapid expansion last year.

Earlier in the day, the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite dropped further into bear market territory, losing 3.95% and hitting a fresh 52-week low. The index is now sitting now roughly 23% off its high. The Dow Jones Industrial Average shed 809.28 points, or 2.4%. The S&P 500 lost 2.8%.

In April, the S&P 500 is down 7.8%, the Nasdaq lost 12.2%, and the Dow has declined 4.2%.

Stock picks and investing trends from CNBC Pro:

Those moves came as fears of a global economic slowdown spurred investors to ditch tech stocks ahead of their quarterly results.

“It’s a high volatility, low volume market that’s concerned about two things,” said Art Hogan, chief market strategist at National Securities. “One is, you know, Federal Reserve policy, and the other is the China lock downs and how long they last.”

Facebook parent Meta is set to report earnings on Wednesday, with Apple and Amazon reporting earnings on Thursday. T-Mobile, Boeing, PayPal and Ford are also reporting earnings on Wednesday.

On the economic front, investors will be watching for the latest data on weekly mortgage applications, international trade and pending home sales.

WATCH LIVEWATCH IN THE APP

Source: Business - cnbc.com

3 things are pulling the market down, but only 1 needs to settle to find a bottom, Cramer says

WHO says weekly Covid deaths have dropped to lowest level since March 2020