It's one of the biggest earnings days of the year
Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJI) futures are trading comfortably above fair value ahead of one of the biggest earnings days of the year. Blue chip Microsoft (MSFT) is pointed higherafter an upbeat earnings release, setting the tone ahead of quarterly results from fellow tech names Intel (INTC), Amazon.com (AMZN), and Alphabet (GOOGL) later in the day. Elsewhere, shares of Twitter (TWTR) and Tesla (TSLA) are sharply higher after earnings, as well.
On the data front, weekly jobless claims rose more than expected last week, though the total of unemployed Americans fell to a 45-year low. As such, the S&P 500 Index (SPX) and Nasdaq-100 Index (NDX) are poised to join the Dow in positive territory following yesterday's sell-off.
Continue reading for more on today's market, including:
Analyst: Jump on this depressed IT stock .How the options market reacted to the unbelievable Nvidia sell-off. 2 stocks that sank on analyst downgrades. Plus, Twitter's earnings rally; an e-commerce winner; and an airliner ready to take off.
It'll be another huge day for earnings reports, with Snap (SNAP), Baidu (BIDU), Chipotle Mexican Grill (CMG), Southwest Airlines (LUV), First Solar (FSLR) and Wynn Resorts (WYNN) rolling out earnings.
Asian markets finished mostly lower, tracking Wall Street's brutal Wednesday finish. Japan's Nikkei set the bearish pace with a 3.7% drubbing, while weakness in chipmakers dragged South Korea's Kospi to a 1.6% drop. Hong Kong's Hang Seng shed 1% by the close, but China's Shanghai Composite -- already firmly in bear-market territory -- recovered from an intraday drop of 71 points to settle fractionally higher, up 0.02% for the session.
European stocks are on firmer footing at midday, with sentiment catching a boost from well-received earnings out of Swiss bank UBS and French automaker Peugeot. Meanwhile, as expected, the European Central Bank (ECB) opted to stand pat on interest rates. At last check, the French CAC 40 is up 1.1%, the German DAX is 0.3% higher, and London's FTSE 100 is off 0.1%.