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Futures down: Dow 1.61%, S&P 500 2.14%, Nasdaq 2.61%
April 10 (Reuters) - U.S. stock index futures fell on
Thursday, a day after an eye-watering rally set off by U.S.
President Donald Trump's move to temporarily lower the heavy
tariffs on dozens of countries, while raising the levies on
China.
The U-turn came less than 24 hours after steep new tariffs
took effect on most trading partners, lifting the S&P 500
to its biggest single-day percentage gain since 2008. The Nasdaq
posted its biggest one-day jump since 2001.
Trump also announced a 90-day pause on many of his new
reciprocal tariffs, but hiked them on Chinese imports to 125%
from 104% on Wednesday. Beijing had slapped 84% tariffs on U.S.
imports to match Trump's earlier levy.
"The trade war is now turning into a direct confrontation
between the U.S. and China... we could again be seeing
escalation and de-escalation at the same time, pulling markets
in different directions," Rabobank analysts said.
Despite Wednesday's surge, the S&P 500 and the Dow
are about 4% below levels seen before the reciprocal tariffs
were announced last week.
At 04:55 a.m. ET, Dow E-minis were down 658 points,
or 1.61%, S&P 500 E-minis were down 117.75 points, or
2.14% and Nasdaq 100 E-minis were down 503.5 points, or
2.61%.
Most megacap and growth stocks slid in premarket trade after
recording stellar gains in the last session, with Tesla
sliding 4.5% and Nvidia ( NVDA ) down 3.8%.
Investors will focus on March consumer prices data later in
the day amid worries that Trump's tariffs could hamper global
growth and spur inflation.
Economists polled by Reuters expecting headline inflation to
ease to 2.6% from 2.8% last month on a yearly basis.
"Risks are clearly tilted to the downside, and if the hit to
growth is larger than we assume or the Treasury market stops
functioning, a series of rate cuts and market interventions
could follow," Nordea analysts said.
Traders see at least three 25-basis point cuts from the Fed
this year, starting in June, according to LSEG data.
A weekly jobless claims report will also be released along
with the CPI data at 8:30 a.m. ET and at least six Fed officials
are slated to make public appearances throughout the day.
Meanwhile, U.S. bonds markets were sanguine after a sharp
selloff in the last session, with the yield on the 10-year note
dropping to 4.288% from its February peaks.
The CBOE Volatility Index - seen as Wall Street's
"fear gauge" - fell from its August highs and was last at 38.79
points.
U.S. earnings season could offer more insights into the
health of corporate America. Big banks such as JPMorgan Chase ( JPM )
will report first-quarter results on Friday.