NEW YORK (AP) — Some of Wall Street's brightest stars lost more of their shine Tuesday after another report said U.S. households are getting more pessimistic about the economy.
The S&P 500 fell 0.5% and had been down as much as 1.2% during the day. It was the fourth straight drop for the main measure of the U.S. stock market's health after it set an all-time high last week.
The Nasdaq composite sank 1.4% as several influential Big Tech companies lost momentum and screeched lower. But the majority of stocks nevertheless rose, which helped the Dow Jones Industrial Average add 159 points, or 0.4%.
The U.S. stock market has been generally struggling since the middle of last week after several weaker-than-expected reports on the economy thudded onto Wall Street. On Tuesday, the latest said confidence among U.S. consumers is falling by more than economists expected.
The U.S. economy still appears to be in solid shape, and growth is continuing at the moment. But for the first time since June, a measure of consumers' expectations for the economy in the short term fell below a threshold that usually signals a recession ahead, according to The Conference Board. The increase in pessimism was broad-based and carried across both higher- and lower-income households, as well as older and younger ones.
“There was a sharp increase in the mentions of trade and tariffs, back to a level unseen since 2019,” according to Stephanie Guichard, senior economist, global indicators at The Conference Board. “Most notably, comments on the current administration and its policies dominated the responses.”
For its part, President Donald Trump’s White House said the lower confidence reflects the overhang of his predecessor, former President Joe Biden. It also pointed to recent announcements of investment for new U.S. facilities by Apple and of improving CEO confidence as indicators of upcoming growth.
Wall Street tracks confidence among consumers because solid spending by them has been helping to keep the U.S. economy out of a recession. And Tuesday's report echoed what an earlier report from the University of Michigan suggested: Consumers see the current situation as OK, but they're worried about the future.
The pessimism hit high-momentum areas of the market in particular, those that had seen waves of euphoric investors pile in during recent years. Nvidia fell 2.8%, for example, while Tesla tumbled 8.4%. They were the two heaviest weights on the S&P 500.
Bitcoin likewise sank, falling back toward $88,000, which dragged down stocks of companies in the crypto industry. MicroStrategy, the company that’s raised money in ord to buy more bitcoin and now goes by the name Strategy, fell 11.4%
Zoom Communications dropped 8.5% even though it reported stronger results for the latest quarter than expected. Analysts at UBS pointed to the company’s forecast for revenue growth in the upcoming year, which fell a bit short of their own estimate.
They helped offset a 2.8% rise for Home Depot, which delivered a stronger profit for the latest quarter than analysts expected. CEO Ted Decker, though, said the retailer is still contending with an uncertain economy and higher interest rates, which hems in customers' ability to spend on home improvements.
Along with Home Depot, the majority of stocks within the S&P 500 rose. Homebuilders climbed on hopes that potentially lower mortgage rates could help the industry, for example, and PulteGroup jumped 4.5%.
But homebuilders and retailers are much smaller in market value than Nvidia and other Big Tech stocks, which gives them less weight on the S&P 500 and other indexes.
All told, the S&P 500 fell 28.00 points to 5,995.25. The Nasdaq composite dropped 260.54 to 19,026.39, and the Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 159.95 to 43,621.16.
The pace of profit reports is slowing, but the potentially most anticipated report is still to come on Wednesday. That's Nvidia, which has grown to become one of Wall Street's most influential stocks because of nearly insatiable demand for its chips.
Wednesday will provide the first earnings report for the company and its CEO, Jensen Huang, since a Chinese upstart, DeepSeek, upended the artificial-intelligence industry by saying it developed a large language model that can compete with big U.S. rivals without having to use the most expensive chips.
That called into question all the spending Wall Street had assumed would go into not only Nvidia’s chips but also the ecosystem that’s built around the AI boom, including electricity to power large data centers.
In the bond market, Treasury yields pulled back as investors herded into investments generally seen as safer when the U.S. economy’s prospects look rockier. Yields have been swinging sharply since President Donald Trump’s election amid uncertainties about how his policies on tariffs, immigration and taxes could affect the global economy.
Trump has antagonized U.S. trading partners recently, threatening to raise tariffs and inviting them to retaliate with import taxes of their own. Trump said Monday that tariff hikes on imports from Canada and Mexico will move ahead after a one-month delay.
The yield on the 10-year Treasury fell to 4.29% from 4.40% late Monday, which is a notable move for the bond market. It’s down sharply from January, when it was approaching 4.80%, and could be an indication of growing nervousness about upcoming economic growth.
In stock markets abroad, indexes were mixed in Europe after falling across much of Asia. Tokyo’s Nikkei Nikkei 225 lost 1.4% after markets in Japan reopened from a holiday on Monday.
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AP writers Elaine Kurtenbach, Matt Ott and Josh Boak contributed.
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