U.S. stock futures were largely unchanged on Monday evening following a day in which the main Wall Street indexes closed slightly lower, as market participants stayed cautious amid renewed tensions between the United States and Iran and an expiring ceasefire.
Futures snapshot - By 20:10 ET (00:10 GMT), S&P 500 Futures were up 0.1% at 7,155.0 points, Nasdaq 100 Futures rose 0.2% to 26,808.75 points, and Dow Jones Futures edged higher by 0.1% to 49,708.0 points.
In regular trading, the three benchmarks slipped, reversing a short run of gains. The S&P 500 fell about 0.2%, the NASDAQ Composite declined about 0.3%, and the Dow Jones Industrial Average ended marginally lower.
Geopolitics and energy drive caution - Losses were tied to an uptick in Middle East tensions. Iranian forces re-closed the Strait of Hormuz over the weekend, and there were mixed signals about the prospects for peace talks scheduled to take place in Pakistan. The U.S. seized an Iranian cargo vessel during the weekend, an action that drew threats of retaliation from Tehran.
Those developments coincided with a sharp rise in oil prices on Monday, feeding worries about supply and amplifying investor caution. Attention is fixed on planned discussions in Islamabad on Tuesday, where U.S. officials are expected to conduct a second round of talks intended to de-escalate the situation. Iranian officials have signaled no firm commitment to participate, leaving outcomes uncertain.
Policy and corporate catalysts - Beyond geopolitics, the financial calendar contains several potential market movers. In Washington, the confirmation hearing for Federal Reserve chair nominee Kevin Warsh is scheduled for this week. Warsh has highlighted central bank independence while also indicating a potentially narrower policy remit, a stance market participants will be parsing closely during the confirmation process.
Investors are also bracing for a heavy slate of corporate earnings that could give markets fresh direction. Companies due to report before Tuesday’s open include UnitedHealth (UNH), Danaher (DHR), GE Aerospace (GE), 3M (MMM), Northrop Grumman (NOC), Halliburton (HAL) and Rtx Corp (RTX).
On the economic front, March retail sales data are scheduled for Tuesday and will be watched for signs of consumer resilience amid mounting energy costs.
Market outlook - With geopolitical risk elevated, energy prices climbing, a key monetary confirmation hearing imminent, and several major earnings releases pending, traders remained measured. The confluence of these factors left equities with only modest movement in futures trading as market participants awaited further clarity from diplomatic talks, corporate reports and economic releases.