Nasdaq futures fall 2% on tech worries, Fed hike bets

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Contracts tracking the tech-heavy Nasdaq fell 2%, leading declines among Wall Street futures on Tuesday, as concerns around imminent rate hikes in the United States and debt-backed corporate spending on AI weighed on investor sentiment.

Stocks across the globe, including those in Europe and Asia, came under pressure following a selloff on Wall Street in the previous session, while crude oil and precious metals also fell. [MKTS/GLOB]

The weakness in U.S. ​artificial intelligence-related ⁠stocks is likely to persist as investors worry about ballooning valuations at a time when ⁠elevated borrowing costs could make AI spending more costly.

At 03:33 a.m. ET, Dow E-minis were down 372 points, or 0.71%, S&P 500 E-minis were down 101.25 points, or 1.34%, Nasdaq 100 E-minis were down ​693.25 points, or 2.25%.

Traders expect the Federal Reserve to hike borrowing costs by a total of 50 basis points by December, according to the CME Group's FedWatch Tool, up from one 25 ​basis point hike two weeks ago, as investors price in hawkish monetary policy under ⁠new Chair Kevin Warsh.

The yield on the short-term 2-year Treasury note slipped about 4 bps to 4.19%, ⁠after touching a four-month high on Monday.

Investors have been concerned about elevated valuations of AI-related stocks following a strong rally earlier this quarter ‌in the aftermath of the Middle East ​ceasefire.

Chip stocks advanced on Monday, with the Philadelphia SE Semiconductor Index hitting a record high. Micron's results on Wednesday could offer some clues into ⁠the outlook for memory and AI chips.

Elon Musk's SpaceX was the latest megacap to turn to the bond market, ‌following a blockbuster IPO earlier this month, despite logging net losses the year ​before. The stock ‌lost 16% on Monday, and shares of Alphabet, Meta, Microsoft and Amazon.com also fell sharply.

Investors are keeping a wary eye ‌on developments in the Middle East after the U.S. waived ⁠sanctions on ⁠Iran for 60 days after the first round of talks under a nascent peace deal, with President Donald Trump saying he will "do what I have to do" if Iran does not stick to its side of the agreement.

Later in the day, focus will be on a batch of private surveys on business activity for ​the month of June, ahead of the crucial Fed-preferred inflation report - the Personal Consumption Expenditures Index - due on Friday. Economists expect ⁠the price ‌index to touch 4.1%, more than twice the central bank's target.

(Reporting ​by ‌Johann M Cherian in Bengaluru; Editing by Mrigank Dhaniwala)

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