Updated 2 min read
US stocks posted hefty losses early Tuesday after President Trump reignited trade-war tensions with Europe over Greenland, while a Japan-led global bond sell-off reverberated through markets.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average (^DJI) tumbled roughly 1.5%, or over 700 points. The S&P 500 (^GSPC) sank 1.4%, while the Nasdaq Composite (^IXIC) retreated 1.6% as investors fled risker bets, on the heels of a losing week for Wall Street stocks.
Investors are facing a rocky return to trading as the risk of full-on US-EU trade war rattles nerves just as earnings season gets going.
Over the weekend, Trump said eight NATO countries would face extra import duties of 10% unless the US got a deal on a purchase of the Danish territory. On Monday, he doubled down on his pursuit of Greenland even as the EU discussed $108 billion in retaliatory tariffs. It could also deploy an “anti-coercion instrument” with a potential fallout of some $8 trillion for US assets.
Trump then threatened on Monday to put a 200% import tariff on France’s wines after its leader Emmanuel Macron turned down the US president’s invitation to join his “Board of Peace.”
The EU’s response to these threats will be “unflinching, united, and proportional,” European Commission leader Ursula von der Leyen warned on Tuesday, keeping tensions high.
Treasury yields jumped to their highest levels in four months as a sell-off in Japanese bonds added pressure on US debt. In other assets, the dollar (DX-Y.NYB) fell to a two-week low as the “Sell America” trade returned, and haven seekers drove gold (GC=F) and silver (SI=F) to yet more record highs.
Focus is now turning to the World Economic Forum in Davos, where Trump is reportedly set to hold a meeting with other countries over the Greenland crisis. He is scheduled to give his key address on Wednesday.
Looking ahead, the Supreme Court may rule as soon as this week on whether Trump’s use of emergency powers to impose sweeping tariffs is constitutional.
Investors are also bracing for a busy earnings slate, with results from Netflix (NFLX) due after market close on Tuesday. The streaming giant’s stock edged up, bucking the premarket trend after it amended its bid for Warner Bros. Discovery’s (WBD) studio to an all-cash offer on Tuesday.
LIVE 13 updates
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‘I have a lot of messages for Davos’: Trump doubles down on Greenland and adds new tariff threats
Issuing a series of comments and social media posts overnight that doubled down on his threats to take over Greenland, President Trump set the stage for his trip to Davos, Switzerland, where he’s expected to meet with foreign leaders and deliver a speech widely expected to test the alignment of the US and European countries.
Yahoo Finance’s Ben Werschkul reports:
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Wall Street bull Dan Ives says ‘buy tech winners’ as market opens weaker over Greenland dispute
Wedbush analyst Dan Ives said the market sell-off is a buying opportunity for many AI names as investors take a “risk-off” approach to the markets amid US trade tensions with the EU over the future of Greenland.
That includes some of the biggest laggards in Tuesday’s trading session, including Nvidia (NVDA), Microsoft (MSFT), Palantir (PLTR), CrowdStrike (CRWD), Nebius (NBIS), Apple (AAPL), Palo Alto (PANW), Google (GOOG), and Tesla (TSLA).
“The back and forth war of words between Trump and the EU will give investors another opportunity to own the tech winners and despite the bears always trying to yell fire in a crowded theater,” Ives, who is quite bullish on the sector, wrote in a note to clients, adding, “the AI Revolution is still in the early days of playing out.”
Ives believes the US is in the midst of the “4th Industrial Revolution” that will see its “next stage of growth in 2026.”
Tom Essaye, Sevens Report Research founder, told Yahoo Finance’s Opening Bid that “every sort of decent dip should be viewed as a buying opportunity,” though he said to wait for a further dip of 3% to 5% from the recent highs to jump in.
“Unless you are concerned that Trump will willingly enact policies that will slow the economy or hurt the markets … then you have to focus on earnings, on underlying solid economic growth, on the fact that the Fed is still likely to cut rates, probably in the first half of this year, and that AI enthusiasm is still alive and well and as long as those things are true,” Essaye said.
The tech sector ETF (XLK) was down by about 1.3% in the early trading session.
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Stocks sink at the open as trade-war jitters rattle markets
Tech led a tumble in US stocks at the market open as President Trump’s further ignition of trade-war tensions with Europe overnight sent investors fleeing riskier bets.
The Nasdaq Composite (^IXIC) retreated 1.8%, while the S&P 500 (^GSPC) sank 1.4%. The Dow Jones Industrial Average (^DJI) fell roughly 1.2% — a drop of more than 600 points — as markets reopened for a holiday-shortened trading week after MLK Day.
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3M stock sinks after Q4 earnings
3M Company (MMM) stock sank about 4% on Tuesday morning as the Minnesota-based company beat earnings expectations but faced a broader market sell-off on the prospect of new tariffs over Greenland.
On an adjusted basis, stripping out significant one-time costs, the Post-it Note maker reported earnings per share of $1.83, compared to analysts’ forecasts of $1.80, according to S&P Global Market Intelligence. The company expected temporary charges from tariffs and stranded costs from removing PFAS materials from its products. In Q4, 3M realized $0.56 per share in net costs from litigation.
Sales grew 2.1% in Q4 to $6.1 billion, topping expectations for $6 billion in sales.
For 2026, the company expects adjusted sales growth of around 4% for full-year adjusted EPS of $8.06. Full-year operating cash flow is expected to be $2.3 billion.
“2025 was an important year for 3M as we build a strong foundation that is reshaping our operating model and driving sustainable value creation,” 3M CEO William Brown said.
Big Tech sinks as investors flee riskier assets
Big Tech and AI stocks dropped in premarket trade Tuesday as investors rotated out of riskier bets amid President Trump’s escalation of trade war tensions with Europe.
Nvidia (NVDA), Microsoft (MSFT), Meta (META), and Oracle (ORCL) fell around 2%.
Alphabet (GOOGL), Broadcom (AVGO), Tesla (TSLA), and Amazon (AMZN) sank almost 3%.
Nvidia-backed AI cloud and data center names Nebius (NBIS) and CoreWeave (CRWV) plunged over 5%.
Apple (AAPL) shares dropped more modestly — just over 1%.
Wall Street’s calm is shattered by Greenland and Japan shocks
Investors are unprepared for a correction in stocks, BofA survey shows
This week’s sudden stock market pullback might be catching a lot of investors off guard, per Bloomberg.
It reports:
Premarket trending tickers: Hawaiian Electric, D.R. Horton, and Strategy
Hawaiian Electric (HE) stock fell 5% before the bell on Tuesday after receiving a Sell rating and a $12.50 price target from Jefferies analysts.
D.R. Horton (DHI) stock fell 3% during premarket hours after reporting lower first quarter profit as affordability concerns continued to put off home buyers, hurting the company’s sales.
Strategy (MSTR) stock dropped 4% before the bell today. Strategy, which is one of the largest corporate holders of bitcoin, saw its shares fall on Tuesday, as bitcoin (BTC-USD) edged lower.
Treasurys join global bond slide after Japan triggers sell-off
Treasury prices fell, pushing yields to the highest in more than four months as a fierce sell-off in Japanese bonds spilled over into global debt markets.
Bloomberg reports:
RAPT stock skyrockets on $2.2 billion GSK acquisition
British pharma giant GSK (GSK, GSK.L) has agreed to buy RAP Therapeutics (RAPT) in a $2.2 billion deal that will bolster its food allergy treatments.
Shares of the US-based biotech rocketed over 60% higher before the bell on news of the acquisition. GSK’s US-listed stock traded little changed.
Reuters reports:
Treasurys join global bond slide as tariff angst grips markets
Treasurys fell early on Tuesday as President Trump’s tariff threats over Greenland dimmed the allure of US assets and ignited concerns the duties on European imports would add to inflationary pressures.
Bloomberg reports:
Gold holds just below record price as Greenland insecurity buoys haven demand
Bloomberg reports:
Oil prices hold as EU-US trade concerns build in response to Greenland push
Bloomberg reports: