Dow, S&P 500, Nasdaq futures slip after brutal sell-off in wait for Trump’s Davos speech

US stock futures faltered on Wednesday, eyeing a return to the steepest selloff in months as Wall Street waited for President Trump’s speech at Davos for insight into the Greenland crisis.
Dow Jones Industrial Average futures (YM=F) edged down around 0.2%, while those on the tech-heavy Nasdaq 100 (NQ=F) backed off 0.3% in a reversal from earlier small gains. Meanwhile, S&P 500 futures (ES=F) slipped 0.1%, coming off a bruising Tuesday session that saw investors rush for the exits against a backdrop of global insecurity.
Stocks are wavering after Trump appeared to strike a less aggressive tone on Greenland, saying he thinks a deal will be reached “where NATO will be very happy.” He is expected to hold meetings with other countries in Davos over the EU-US spat.
But Trump also persisted with his push for control of Greenland, appearing confident the US will prevail as he left for the World Economic Forum. That kept trade-war fears and the “Sell America” trade alive, as the EU warned again it was “fully prepared” to hit back against new tariffs.
A technical issue forced Air Force One to turn back mid-flight, delaying Trump’s key address at Davos. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said the 8:30 a.m. ET appearance may be pushed back three hours.
Also up ahead, the Supreme Court is set to hear arguments on Wednesday over the Trump administration’s removal of Lisa Cook as a Federal Reserve governor. The case will test the central bank’s independence and the limits on presidential power to fire Fed board members at will. Concerns about political interference in Fed policy making have haunted markets, as Jerome Powell faces a criminal probe and Bessent publicly builds a case against the Fed chair.
On the corporate front, Netflix (NFLX) stock fell in premarket trading after the streaming giant’s quarterly results showed left investors unimpressed. As the season gets underway, S&P 500 companies’ earnings beats are being met by the worst share-price reactions on record, Bloomberg data shows. Wednesday brings a busy stretch of results, including reports from Johnson & Johnson (JNJ), Charles Schwab (SCHW), and other mid-sized financial institutions.
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