Wall Street set to open higher after Monday's brutal sell-off

Monday's falls were triggered by investors fearing the US could slip into recession amid President Donald Trump's sweeping tariff and policy changes.

Wall Street set to open higher after Monday's brutal sell-off
Wall Street sign
  • Asian shares fell on Tuesday as US futures steadied after Wall Street's Monday selloff.
  • Investors fear a US recession due to Trump's tariffs and policy changes.
  • Wall Street is set to open higher on Tuesday.

Wall Street is set to open higher on Tuesday following Monday's brutal market sell-off.

S&P 500 and Nasdaq futures were about 0.3% and 0.4% higher, respectively, at 6:30 a.m. ET.

Monday's falls were triggered by investors fearing the US economy could slip into a recession amid President Donald Trump's sweeping tariff and policy changes. On Sunday, Trump said the US is in the middle of a "transition" and did not rule out a recession.

In Asia Japan's Nikkei 225 closed 0.6% lower after falling as much as 2.7% to its lowest level since September 17. Meanwhile, the Japanese yen — a safe-haven currency — rose to a five-month high against the dollar.

South Korea's Kospi closed down 1.3% after falling by as much as 2.6%. Australia's ASX200 dropped 0.9%.

Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index ended flat after spending most of the day in the red, while China's CSI 300 bucked the trend to close 0.3% higher.

European markets were mixed on Tuesday, with London's FTSE 100 down 0.2% in late morning trading, while Germany's Dax 30 was up 0.2%. The Stoxx Europe 600 index fell 0.4%.

The action in Asia followed a selloff in the US with the S&P500 ending 2.7% lower. The tech-heavy Nasdaq 100 fell 3.8% and shed $1 trillion in value.

"Elevated uncertainty around the specifics/implementation of US tariffs is injecting volatility in financial markets, begging the question of whether the rotation away from US equities — which has gone hand in hand with a weaker dollar — is about to give way to a broader wave of risk-off price action," wrote GlobalData TS Lombard analysts in a Monday note.

The sell-off in US stock markets could prompt foreign investors to put their money elsewhere, changing up global financial flows, Nomura analysts wrote in a Monday note.

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