US stock index futures drift lower
US stock index futures were lower in early trade as Wall Street returned from the Presidents’ Day holiday. The losses were led by the tech sector, with ‘Mag 7’ and semiconductors mostly negative overnight. But most then traded off their lows as the European session progressed. The weakness followed a fortnight of losses for the S&P 500, with AI-related disruption fears weighing heavily on sentiment across multiple sectors.
Last week, the S&P 500 and Dow both fell over 1%, while the Nasdaq dropped over 2%. This marked the tech-heavy index’s fifth straight weekly decline, its longest losing streak since 2022. Investors brushed off Wednesday’s relatively strong Non-Farm Payroll report and the softer-than-expected CPI data from Friday.

Source: TN Trader
Attention now turns to the Federal Reserve meeting minutes on Wednesday and Friday’s Core PCE inflation update. On the earnings front, Palo Alto Networks reports after the bell on Tuesday, with DoorDash, Walmart, and Wayfair due later in the week.
Overall, there has been a decline in upside momentum across the US majors since the beginning of this month. Many big tech and certain AI-related stocks have taken a hit as investors continue to question the likely return on investment.
The spending commitments are so large that many cash-rich corporations have halted share buybacks. Some have issued more stock, and others have turned to debt markets to raise funds for AI investment.
Meanwhile, software companies have come under scrutiny as investors question their business models, given growing competition from AI. The S&P 500 remains stuck under 7,000.
While there has been no significant break of support so far, investors appear wary of adding to their exposure at current levels. They seem to be sitting on their hands and waiting for a catalyst which will either provide a reason to sell or be the trigger to reload and thereby restart the bull market.



















