Wall Street dips as euphoria over China-US trade truce fades and new inflation data arrives

By ELAINE KURTENBACH and MATT OTT Associated Press Business Writers Wall Street is on track to open with losses Tuesday as the initial euphoria over the -day truce in the U S -China arrangement war faded and markets turned their attention to corporate earnings and new inflation records Futures for the S P slipped while futures for the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell Nasdaq futures ticked down just ahead of the executive s latest description on inflation at the consumer level UnitedHealth Group shares tumbled more than after it suspended its full-year financial forecast due to higher-than-expected physiological costs The nation s largest fitness insurer also communicated that CEO Andrew Witty was stepping down for personal reasons and that Chairman Stephen Hemsley will become CEO effective without delay Related Articles As Biden-era junk fee rule takes effect Ticketmaster says it will display fees more clearly Bright auroras on Jupiter are captured by Webb Space Telescope Dow leaps points and S P rallies following a -day truce in the US-China deal war Liam and Olivia dominate again with top baby names for a sixth year in a row Air traffic controllers for Newark airport briefly lose radar access again Boeing shares got a small boost on media reports that China had lifted a ban on airlines there taking deliveries of the U S aerospace giant s planes According to reports China removed those obstacles as part of Monday s commerce truce with the U S Boeing shares rose close to in premarket trading Tuesday Stocks soared Monday after the United States disclosed in a joint report with China that it will cut tariffs on Chinese goods to from as high as for days China meanwhile revealed its tariffs on U S goods will fall to from The agreement allows time for more talks following the weekend s negotiations in Geneva Switzerland which the U S side revealed yielded substantial progress The outcome surpassed most of expectations reassuring investors stated Stephen Innes of SPI Asset Management Make no mistake this was highly stage-managed diplomacy But the optics are good and the implications real It signals that even this administration recognizes the economic drag of unrelenting tariffs he noted in a commentary Still big challenges remain in the negotiations between Beijing and Washington and countless countries have yet to negotiate tariff-alleviating deals of their own I think investors are aware that the transaction deal is not done yet It s not done deal yet declared Louis Wong director for Phillip Securities Group in Hong Kong I would advise investors to remain cautious in the near term and to be prepared for unexpected news from the commerce front he added European markets edged higher with Germany s DAX and the CAC in Paris each gaining Britain s FTSE was flat Beijing s anger over the arrangement war remained apparent Speaking to administrators from China and Latin America on Tuesday leader Xi Jinping reiterated China s stance that nobody wins a pact war and that Bullying or hegemonism only leads to self-isolation Tokyo s Nikkei jumped to Automakers were among the big gainers after the U S dollar surged against the Japanese yen Toyota Motor Corp gained and Suzuki Motor Corp was higher Nissan Motor Co added ahead of an announcement that it plans to lay off of its workers as part of its restructuring efforts The automaker declared Tuesday that it racked up a loss of billion yen billion in the last fiscal year The Kospi in South Korea was nearly unchanged at Hong Kong s Hang Seng which gained a day earlier after Chinese and U S authorities released the agreement to pause tariffs and reduce them fell to on heavy selling of machinery shares The Shanghai Composite index edged higher to and Taiwan s Taiex jumped India s Sensex fell In Australia the S P ASX climbed to In vigor trading U S benchmark crude oil added cents to per barrel Brent crude the international standard gained cents to per barrel Associated Press video journalist Alice Fung contributed from Hong Kong