|
|||||
|
|
Pre-market futures are tumbling to start a new holiday-shortened trading week, generally on global economic concerns. Pick a direction, you’ll find something: Japanese bonds are falling on Prime Minister Takaichi’s move to cut taxes on food, signaling a less-than-robust domestic economy; the wealthy and powerful men and women of Davos this week brace for President Trump’s appearance tomorrow at the 2026 World Economic Forum.
Trump’s latest fixation has been on the U.S. annexation of Greenland, which is currently an autonomous country under Denmark’s government. This shake-up in normal diplomacy threatens the very existence of NATO, and if military strikes from the U.S. indeed transpire, it would likely snap the post-WWII alliance. Currently, Trump is raising tariffs +10% on European countries who disapprove of this potential annexation. Retaliatory tariffs are already in place. Tomorrow’s appearance from the U.S. president will be key to where this latest drama unfolds.
Thus, the Dow is -700 points at this hour, the S&P 500 -106 and Nasdaq -460 points. The small-cap Russell 2000 is -50 points at this hour. Bond yields have risen to +4.3% on the 10-year and +3.6% on the 2-year. Both the stock and bond markets have room to maneuver, coming off healthy levels overall, but these developments do threaten to bring a material shift in economic conditions in ways other global disruptions have not, at least not so far in 2026.
Global conglomerate 3M (MMM) posted mixed results in its Q4 report released early this morning. Earnings of $1.83 per share outpaced the Zacks consensus by a penny, while revenues of $6.0 billion in the quarter came in slightly below estimates of $6.08 billion. Officially, this marks the 12th-straight earnings beat, and both earnings and sales numbers are up notably year over year. But this is a tough morning in the market in general, and shares are down -3.75% at this moment.
D.R. Horton (DHI) — which calls itself “America’s Builder,” as it provides new homes across various economic levels of the housing market — posted good outperformance on both top and bottom lines. Earnings of $2.03 per share bettered the $1.95 expected, while $6.89 billion in revenues easily surpassed the $6.71 billion. This may be seen as a good sign for the U.S. housing market; the company has now beaten earnings estimates in two of the last four quarters. But shares are down -5.5% on the news.
Fifth Third Bank (FITB) also outperformed expectations on both earnings and sales, with $1.12 per share reported on $2.34 billion in revenues. These outperformed expectations for $1.00 per share and $2.32 billion, respectively. This makes 12-straight earnings beats for the Cincinnati-based bank. Shares are down -1.5% on a rough trading morning, but still up +9% over the past year.
Earnings and more earnings! Zacks Rank #3 (Hold)-rated Netflix (NFLX) reports Q4 results after today’s close, looking for +27.9% earnings growth year over year and +16.8% on revenues. United Airlines (UAL), also a Zacks Rank #3, is expected to bring -8.6% earnings growth and +4.67% higher revenues from a year ago. Regional bank reportage continues, as well, with Bank OZK (OZK), Zions Bancorp (ZION) and Wintrust Financial (WTFC) coming out with earnings results this afternoon.
Want the latest recommendations from Zacks Investment Research? Today, you can download 7 Best Stocks for the Next 30 Days. Click to get this free report
This article originally published on Zacks Investment Research (zacks.com).
| 26 min | |
| 26 min | |
| 38 min | |
| 38 min | |
| 46 min |
Stock Market Today: Dow's Losses Mount On Trump Greenland Tariff News; Gold Stocks Shine (Live Coverage)
DHI
Investor's Business Daily
|
| 53 min | |
| 53 min | |
| 54 min | |
| 1 hour | |
| 1 hour | |
| 1 hour | |
| 1 hour | |
| 1 hour | |
| 1 hour |
Stock Market Today: Dow Gets Pummeled On Trump Greenland Tariff News; Amazon Tumbles (Live Coverage)
DHI
Investor's Business Daily
|
| 2 hours |
Join thousands of traders who make more informed decisions with our premium features. Real-time quotes, advanced visualizations, backtesting, and much more.
Learn more about FINVIZ*Elite