Wall Street is catching its breath. Dow Jones futures held steady near 48,870 during European trading hours on Tuesday, offering a tentative sign of stabilization after a punishing Monday session that left investors rattled and portfolios bruised.
S&P 500 futures hovered near 6,850 while Nasdaq 100 contracts stayed close to 24,780, as traders held their positions and waited to see whether calm could hold ahead of the regular U.S. market open. The question on everyone’s mind was simple — is this a pause or the beginning of something worse?
How Bad Was Monday for the Dow Jones
Monday was not kind to Wall Street. The Dow Jones fell 1.66%, the S&P 500 dropped 1.04%, and the Nasdaq 100 declined 1.13% — a broad selloff driven by a single, growing fear — that artificial intelligence is advancing fast enough to disrupt entire industries before markets have had time to adjust.
The anxiety is not abstract. It is showing up in stock prices, in earnings projections, and in the conversations happening inside boardrooms across the country. Investors who once viewed AI as a distant force are now watching it arrive at their doorstep ahead of schedule, and Monday’s session reflected that unease in real time.
IBM and American Express Bear the Brunt
No stocks felt the pain more acutely than IBM and American Express. IBM saw its shares plunge 13.1% after an AI startup unveiled a new suite of coding tools that investors feared could significantly erode demand for traditional enterprise software. It was a dramatic single-day drop for one of the most storied names in American business — and a signal that no company is immune from the AI disruption narrative, regardless of size or legacy.
American Express was not far behind, sliding 7.2% after research emerged outlining the potential scale of AI-related job losses. For a company deeply reliant on a large white-collar workforce, that kind of research lands differently — and markets responded.
The losses laid bare how quickly investor sentiment can shift when a new technology appears to threaten an established business model. With Home Depot, Nvidia, Salesforce, and Snowflake all set to report earnings in the days ahead, Wall Street will be watching every release for clues about how AI is reshaping corporate fortunes right now.
New Tariff Threats Add to the Pressure
As if the AI turbulence were not enough, traders were also navigating a rapidly shifting trade policy landscape. The Trump administration is weighing a fresh round of national security tariffs on several industries, pursued under Section 232 of the Trade Expansion Act of 1962. Critically, these proposed measures would be separate from the 15% global tariff announced over the weekend — pointing to a potentially significant escalation of the overall trade burden on U.S. imports.
The legal standing of some existing tariffs is also under scrutiny after a Supreme Court ruling last week invalidated several levies imposed during Trump’s second term. That decision has injected fresh uncertainty into an already complicated picture, particularly since Congress is considered unlikely to extend the new tariffs beyond the 150-day statutory window.
Global Trade Relations Show Signs of Strain
The international fallout from Washington’s trade posture continued to ripple outward Tuesday. The European Union signaled it may pause ratification of its trade agreement with the United States in response to the new duties — a move that would further complicate trans-Atlantic economic ties. Meanwhile, a planned three-day meeting between India and the U.S. aimed at finalizing an interim trade deal has been delayed, with Washington said to be reassessing its broader tariff strategy before committing to new bilateral arrangements.
Taken together, AI-driven market anxiety and escalating trade friction have created a volatile backdrop that investors are struggling to navigate. With key earnings reports still ahead and the White House’s next policy moves far from certain, the Dow Jones and the broader market are likely to remain on edge well into the coming weeks.
Source: FXStreet

