Today: 21 May 2026
Dow, S&P 500 futures dip as Trump policy headlines bite and jobs report looms; Samsung flags record AI-chip profit

Dow, S&P 500 futures dip as Trump policy headlines bite and jobs report looms; Samsung flags record AI-chip profit

NEW YORK, Jan 8, 2026, 05:49 (EST)

U.S. stock index futures slipped on Thursday morning as investors turned cautious ahead of Friday’s U.S. jobs report, while defense shares jumped after President Donald Trump called for a $1.5 trillion military budget in 2027. At 05:08 a.m. ET, Dow futures were down 0.30%, S&P 500 futures fell 0.22% and Nasdaq 100 futures eased 0.31%; RTX gained 4.9% in premarket trading and Lockheed Martin climbed 7.2%. “While details are unclear and implementation cumbersome, a move towards more government intervention would create uncertainty and add to some risk premium in the markets,” said Mohit Kumar, an economist at Jefferies. Reuters

The early pullback comes after a strong start to 2026 for risk assets, but traders are still treating geopolitics as a live wire — from Venezuela’s oil flows to talk around Greenland — and the market has started to price a little more noise. European aerospace and defense stocks hit fresh highs, oil clawed back above $60 a barrel and Wall Street futures softened. “What investors are realising is that the threat of geopolitics is not going away,” said Peter McLean, head of multi-asset portfolio solutions at Stonehage Fleming Investment Management. Reuters

Friday’s nonfarm payrolls report — the government’s monthly jobs tally excluding farm work — is a focal point because it can shift expectations for Federal Reserve rate policy. It is due at 08:30 a.m. ET.

On Wednesday, the S&P 500 fell 0.34% to 6,920.93 and the Dow slid 0.94% to 48,996.08, while the Nasdaq added 0.16% to 23,584.28 as investors rotated back into some large AI-linked names, including Nvidia and Alphabet. “Buy tech and forget about it,” said Jake Dollarhide, chief executive officer of Longbow Asset Management. The S&P 500 is trading at about 22 times expected earnings, above its five-year average of 19, according to LSEG data. Reuters

Trump’s comments about limiting big investors’ access to single-family homes hit homebuilders and housing-linked firms, with D.R. Horton down 3.6% and PulteGroup off 3.2%, while Blackstone briefly fell more than 9% before paring the move. Elsewhere, Warner Bros. Discovery rose 0.4% after again rejecting a Paramount buyout approach and pointing shareholders toward a rival Netflix offer, while Paramount Skydance fell 1%, the Associated Press reported.

Oil steadied after two days of declines as traders weighed swelling U.S. fuel inventories and Venezuela developments. Brent was up at $60.02 a barrel and U.S. West Texas Intermediate held around $56.05; Morgan Stanley analysts forecast a surplus as large as 3 million barrels per day in the first half of 2026. Washington has also outlined a deal to gain access to up to $2 billion of Venezuelan crude and seized two Venezuela-linked oil tankers in the Atlantic, one under Russia’s flag.

In Asia, Samsung Electronics projected a three-fold jump in fourth-quarter operating profit to a record 20 trillion won ($13.82 billion), beating an LSEG SmartEstimate of 18 trillion won, as tight supply and an AI-driven demand surge pushed up prices for conventional memory chips. Contract prices for DRAM — a common type of memory used in servers, PCs and smartphones — rose 313% in the fourth quarter from a year earlier, TrendForce data showed; TrendForce expects another 55% to 60% rise this quarter. Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang called demand “really, really quite terrific,” while Samsung co-CEO TM Roh said some impact from higher memory prices was “inevitable.” Reuters

Bitcoin slid in European trading, falling 2.4% to $90,449.9 by 03:35 ET and dropping below $91,000 as geopolitical risk and the looming U.S. payrolls report constrained risk appetite.

Stock Market Today

  • Crude Oil Prices Surge Amid Strait of Hormuz Closure Concerns
    May 21, 2026, 1:54 PM EDT. Crude oil July WTI futures climbed 3.20% as tensions rose over the Strait of Hormuz closure, a key oil transit chokepoint handling about 20% of the world's oil and liquefied natural gas. Iran's Supreme Leader's statement that enriched uranium will stay in Iran dampened hopes for a US-Iran deal. Military deployments by Pakistan to Saudi Arabia and drone attacks in the UAE and Saudi Arabia escalated geopolitical risks. The International Energy Agency says global oil inventories fell sharply and the market remains "severely undersupplied" until at least October, even if the conflict ends. Goldman Sachs estimates 14.5 million bpd cuts in Persian Gulf supply and a drawdown of nearly 500 million barrels from global stocks. OPEC plans phased quota increases aiming to restore output by September, despite conflict-driven supply constraints.

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