Stocks fell broadly on Tuesday as investors rotated out of technology names into defensive companies set to benefit from U.S. economic growth. The partial-U.S. government shutdown also continued to hamper market sentiment.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average
Earnings reports dominated headlines on Tuesday, with Palantir Technologies
Chief Executive Officer Alex Karp called the company's earnings "indisputably the best results that I'm aware of in tech in the last decade," in an interview with CNBC, adding that demand for its products in the United States is so strong that it has paused selling to the nation's allies.
PepsiCo
Jefferies analyst Corey Tarlowe called PepsiCo's move "one of the clearest indications yet" that packaged food companies will be adapting consumer trends by making products more affordable.
"After several years of cumulative price inflation that lifted salty-snack prices ~38% from 2020 to 2024, we view this as the beginning, not the end, of branded price normalization, as manufacturers face slowing volumes, consumer pushback and intensifying competition from private-label alternatives." Tarlowe wrote, adding that this environment favors other companies like Walmart
Walmart was in the news Tuesday after the retailer surpassed the $1 trillion market cap threshold, joining tech companies such as Amazon
Late Tuesday, the House of Representatives narrowly passed a bill to end the three-day partial government shutdown, in a vote of 217-215 mostly along party lines. The bill contains measures to fund the departments of Defense, Treasury, State, Health and Human Services, Labor, Housing and Urban Development, Transportation, and Education through the remainder of the fiscal year on Sept. 30.
For Wednesday, market participants will tune in to earnings reports from companies including Advanced Micro Devices
