Stocks fell on Tuesday, giving back early morning gains, as investors digested yet another red-hot inflation report. The report showed another sharp increase in prices for a variety of goods and services in March. The Dow Jones Industrial Average few over 80 points, while the S&P 500 Index and Nasdaq Composite were both about 0.3% lower.

Here's how the market settled on Tuesday:

S&P 500 Index (SPY  ): -0.34% or -15.18 points to 4,397.35

Dow Jones Industrial Average (DIA  ): -0.23% or -80.10 points to 34,227.98

Nasdaq Composite Index (QQQ  ): -0.30% or -40.38 points to 13,371.57

Lululemon to roll-out resale/trade-in program nationwide:

Lululemon (LULU  ) shares rose on Monday following the announcement that the company will roll-out its trade-in and resale program "Lululemon Like New" nationwide in the United States.

The program will be available to customers starting Earth Day, April 22, after a successful two-state pilot launched last year. Lululemon plans to reinvest 100% of its profits to support the athletic brand's Impact Agenda, which include making 100% of products with sustainable materials and end-of-use solutions by 2030.

Goldman Sachs upgrades CrowdStrike to buy:

Shares of CrowdStrike (CRWD  ) rose on Tuesday after Goldman Sachs (GS  ) upgraded the cybersecurity firm's stock to buy and raised its price target to $285 per share from $241, implying a nearly 32% upside.

"We continue to view CRWD as well positioned in the sweet spot of demand ahead of accelerating deterioration of the threat environment," analysts wrote in a note to clients on Tuesday, noting that spending on the company's software Endpoint and XDR are expected to remain a high priority within the security industry.

"As a result, we believe CRWD is one of the best-positioned vendors within our coverage universe to benefit from demand ahead," the analysts added.

Inflation rises by the most since 1981 in March:

U.S. consumers paid more for a variety of goods and services on an annual basis in March as price levels continued to rise amid ongoing supply and demand disruptions.

The Bureau of Labor Statistics' (BLS) Consumer Price Index (CPI) rose 8.5% in March compared to the same month last year, according to the institution's latest report released Tuesday, marking the fastest increase since December 1981. March's print followed a 7.9% annual increase in February.

Some of the biggest contributors to the rise were food, shelter and energy, according to the BLS. The index tracking gas prices surged 18.3% month-over-month in March, representing more than half of the total CPI increase. Back in February, gas prices rose 6.6%.

Excluding volatile food and energy prices, core CPI rose 6.5% in March over last year, rising form a 6.4% increase in February and posting the fastest increase since August 1982.

Here's how benchmarks started trading after market open:

S&P 500 Index: +0.64% or +28.07 points to 4,440.60

Dow Jones Industrial Average: +0.29% or +100.67 points to 34,408.75

Nasdaq Composite Index: +1.21% or +162.91 points to 13,574.87