Wall Street down again
US stock index futures sold off sharply overnight, adding to losses from Friday. The S&P 500 futures fell back towards 6,800 as the European open approached, to trade at a ten-day low, having broken above 7,000 for the first time last Wednesday. The selloff across tech was particularly pronounced. The Nasdaq-100 futures led the decline, with the index down over 4% at one stage when compared to its all-time high from the middle of last week.

Source: TN Trader
There was an all-round risk-off move which saw deep declines across precious metals, energy and cryptos. The moves looked somewhat panicked in nature and were no doubt exacerbated by the relatively thin and illiquid trading conditions in the Asian Pacific session.
Prices began to steady and then recoup some of the overnight losses as the European session progressed. But traders should exercise caution. The overnight plunge may have provided a good opportunity for the ‘dip-buyers’. But there’s a danger that the selling reemerges once US traders are fully engaged later this afternoon.
There has been a ton of speculation over the cause of this ‘risk-off’ move. Many have blamed President Trump’s decision to nominate Kevin Warsh as his preferred candidate to replace Jerome Powell as Chair of the Federal Reserve in May.
Others point the finger at the hotter-than-expected wholesale inflation numbers on Friday, or some disappointing corporate results from ‘big tech’. These may be contributory factors which helped speed up the pace of selling. But the retreat across US equities really took off on Thursday afternoon.
The main issue was that equities were overbought and valuations were, in many cases, extremely ripe. Investors were looking for an excuse to lighten up, and they finally got several. The fact that precious metals, the US dollar, crude oil and natural gas were trading at stretched levels just meant that, like an elastic band, they were ready to snap back.
This week may help investors decide if the moves to date are simply healthy corrections within longer-term moves or signals showing a longer-term change in trend.
Attention flips back to earnings this week, with more than 100 S&P 500 companies due to report. These include Amazon, Alphabet, AMD, Merck and Pfizer, with Disney and Palantir later today. While the fourth quarter earnings season has been generally positive so far, sharp post-results sell-offs in stocks such as Microsoft have heightened caution.
Deutsche Bank strategists note that earnings growth remains on track to be the strongest in four years, but markets appear increasingly selective. Nvidia is under scrutiny after reports that its planned $100 billion investment into OpenAI has stalled, raising fresh questions around AI spending, valuations and capital discipline.
Friday’s Non-Farm Payroll report also looms large. Economists expect payrolls to rise by around 70,000 - a figure that could influence rate expectations and risk appetite, especially given the market’s sensitivity to Fed leadership and inflation signals.

















