The trader works on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange in New York City, USA on March 24, 2025.
Gina Moon | Reuters
U.S. stock futures remained largely unchanged on Tuesday after President Donald Trump rose to a rising hope to cut his initial plan for broad tariffs. Investors also awaited numbers of consumer confidence that could shake the market later in the session.
Futures tied to the S&P 500 It was flat Nasdaq-100 Futures It hovered just below the flatline. Dow Jones Industrial Average Futures Take off just 10 points.
The conference committee’s consumer confidence index reading is scheduled until 10am. The economists voted by Dow Jones are hoping for a print from 98.3 to 93.5 in February.
30 shares during Monday’s session Dow It jumped about 600 points, or about 1.4%. A wide market S&P 500 While there are many high-tech items, almost 1.8% has been added Nasdaq Composite It rose 2.3%.
Wall Street is waiting for mutual tariffs from the Trump administration, as it goes beyond the potential rise in inflation and economic growth potential. According to a report by the Wall Street Journal and Bloomberg News, Wall Street is waiting for mutual tariffs from the Trump administration.
Later on Monday, Trump told news outlets that mutual tariffs could “break many countries.” He added that obligations in certain sectors, such as medicines and automobiles, are still coming in the “near future.”
The main average posted consecutive victory sessions on Monday, but earnings have been generated after rocky ramblings in stocks over the past month. At one point earlier this month, the S&P 500 was closed in the revised territory.
“Usually, stock markets recover almost as quickly as they decline during market adjustments,” said Jim Elios, founder of Elios Financial Group. “So we believe we are on the other side of this market correction and we believe that our inventory should continue to move high despite some volatility.”