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Wall Street futures fall ahead of JPMorgan earnings and inflation data

?U.S. Stock index futures fell on Tuesday as investors awaited important inflation data for hints on interest rate trends, and the fourth-quarter earnings from JPMorgan Chase, which would mark the beginning of the earnings season.

The shares of the largest U.S. bank rose 0.6% in premarket trade ahead of its quarterly results. Rivals are expected to release their results later this week. Major lenders will likely report higher quarterly profits due to a revival of M&A.

Delta Air Lines and the Custodian Bank?BNY were also scheduled to release results before the opening of trading.

"Stable U.S. growth and Federal Reserve rate cuts have increased corporate earnings and profit margins. This has lifted U.S. stock prices and supported our overweight. This will continue to play out in the Q4 results, starting this week," BlackRock Investment Institute strategists said in a report.

The Federal Reserve will be keeping an eye on the inflation figures. They are expected to show that U.S. consumer price growth accelerated in December. This would support the decision of the Federal Reserve at their policy meeting later this month to keep?its interest rate steady.

Wall Street's major indexes started the week in a soft manner on Monday, after U.S. prosecutors launched a criminal probe into Fed Chairman Jerome Powell. The investigation raised questions about the central bank’s independence and attracted criticism from Republicans.

Markets bounced back in the afternoon session as tech giants and Walmart gained, sending the S&P 500 to new record closings.

At 5:09 am ET, U.S. S&P E-minis had fallen 10 points or 0.14%. Dow E-minis had dropped 66 points or 0.13%. Nasdaq E-minis fell 61.25 or 0.24%.

Investors have shrugged off geopolitical worries, such as the U.S. military actions and the capture of Venezuelan president Nicolas Maduro ten days ago. Instead, the focus on artificial-intelligence and expectations of high earnings has propelled the indexes up to new heights.

Investors are attracted to small-cap stocks by their high valuations. They have performed better than the broader markets since the beginning of the year. However, it is not yet clear if this trend will continue.

BlackRock Investment Institute's strategists predict that the gap between "Magnificent 7" tech giants, and the rest, will continue to narrow. This is due to a rise in sensitive economic sectors. Meanwhile, productivity gains from AI may help offset earnings downgrades.

Russell 2000 gained 6.2% during the first seven days of trading in 2026, while the S&P 500 only rose by 1.9%.

KeyBanc upgraded both chipmakers to "overweight" and Intel shares gained 3.6%, while AMD shares gained 1.5%. (Reporting and editing by Maju Samuel in Bengaluru, with Medha Singh reporting from Bengaluru)

(source: Reuters)