Futures Movers
Last Updated: Feb. 22, 2026 at 8:08 p.m. ET
U.S. stock-market futures declined Sunday as investors digested the implications of a recent Supreme Court ruling that overturned most of President Donald Trump’s tariffs. The move ahead of the cash market reflected elevated uncertainty around trade policy and near-term price discovery.
Market snapshot
- Dow Jones Industrial Average futures (YM00): down about 240 points, roughly 0.5%
- S&P 500 futures (ES00): down approximately 0.6%
- Nasdaq-100 futures (NQ00): down about 0.8%
These futures moves represent pre-market sentiment and a directional cue for institutional and retail order flow into the U.S. open.
What investors are watching
Investors are seeking clarity on how the court decision will reshape tariff exposure across sectors, supply chains and corporate guidance. With futures lower across the major indices, market participants are weighing potential re-pricing of equities tied to international trade sensitivity.
Context and implications
- Directional signal: Declines in YM00, ES00 and NQ00 signal risk-off sentiment in early trading hours.
- Volatility potential: Rapid policy shifts tied to tariffs can increase intraday volatility and widen bid-ask spreads for index products.
- Sector sensitivity: Industrials, materials and certain technology companies often show heightened sensitivity to trade policy developments; futures price action can foreshadow sector rotations at the open.
Practical notes for traders and analysts
- Use futures levels as a short-term gauge of market sentiment rather than as deterministic forecasts for the trading day.
- Monitor opening auction prints and implied volatility for confirmation of directional bias established in pre-market futures.
This snapshot focuses on immediate market reaction: futures were lower across the three major U.S. index contracts as of the last update, reflecting investor uncertainty following the court decision on tariffs.
