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Dow futures plunge ahead of CPI data: 5 things to know before Wall Street opens

Dow futures pointed lower ahead of Friday’s CPI inflation report, setting up a tense open after a bruising tech-led selloff the prior session.

The trend was similar across the futures of all indices as S&P 500 futures slid 0.41% to 6,822 and Nasdaq-100 futures eased 0.55% to 24,630, and Dow futures slipped over 200 points to 49,304.00.

The drop looks like pre-data risk management rather than panic, but it shows how fragile sentiment has become after Thursday’s declines.

5 things to know before Wall Street opens

1. The early read from index futures is cautious across the board, with all three major contracts in the red.

That weakness follows Thursday’s broad slide, when the Dow fell 669 points (1.3%), and the S&P 500 dropped 1.6% in a selloff led by technology shares.

When markets are this jumpy, futures often exaggerate the mood heading into the cash open, especially before a major macro print.

2. Economists largely expect January CPI to show a 0.3% month-over-month increase, with year-over-year inflation easing to around 2.5%.

Several market briefs also point to a similar 0.3% monthly rise for core CPI (which strips out food and energy), with core inflation seen around 2.5% year over year.

The reason investors care is simple: CPI can quickly reset expectations for when, and how aggressively, the Federal Reserve cuts rates.

3. A hotter-than-expected CPI typically pushes bond yields higher and makes rate cuts look less urgent, which can pressure stock valuations, particularly “growth” stocks whose profits sit further in the future.

That’s why Friday’s print matters even more after a week in which rate expectations have been shifting around each major data release.

The bond market’s reaction may end up driving the equity tape more than the CPI number itself.

4. This CPI arrives with mega-cap tech already under a spotlight, as investors debate whether the AI spending cycle is boosting long-term growth or just chewing through cash in the short run.

The pre-market coverage described a backdrop of renewed “AI fears” ahead of the inflation data, a sign the market is still trading the theme with a hair trigger.

5. Even with CPI looming, stock-specific stories are still moving prices sharply, which is why the market has felt more erratic beneath the surface.

A recent survey highlighted that investors are split on how CPI will land in markets, with 22V Research showing 33% expecting a “risk-on” reaction, 43% “mixed/negligible,” and 24% “risk-off.”

That kind of disagreement tends to show up as bigger swings in individual stocks, especially in rate-sensitive sectors like tech and real estate, because investors are running different playbooks into the same data point.​

By the opening bell, traders will be watching three things in quick succession: the CPI headline, the move in Treasury yields, and whether selling pressure broadens beyond the names that led Thursday’s drop.

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