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Wall Street futures under pressure: 5 things to know before the market opens

US stock futures slipped before Thursday’s jobs report, leaving Wall Street with a cautious tone after a weak session for technology shares.

The rally that carried equities through the first half is not broken, but investors are becoming more selective as chip stocks lose momentum and the Federal Reserve stays data-dependent.

Softer private hiring and cooler factory activity have eased some rate-hike fears, yet Fed Chair Kevin Warsh avoided giving markets a clear signal on July policy.

That puts the focus squarely on payrolls, which could decide whether dip-buyers return or rate worries take control again.

5 things to know before Wall Street opens

1. Futures point to a softer start

Dow futures erased earlier losses to trade 23 points higher, or less than 0.1%. S&P 500 futures slipped 0.05%, while Nasdaq 100 futures remained under pressure, down about 0.4%.

The decline was not severe, but it showed investors were unwilling to add risk before the June nonfarm payrolls report.

With US markets closed on Friday for Independence Day, Thursday’s data carries extra weight for positioning.

2. Payrolls will shape the Fed trade

The jobs report is the main event before the opening bell. Investors are looking for signs that hiring is cooling without pointing to a sharper slowdown in the economy.

A softer-but-stable number could help equities by reducing pressure on the Fed to raise rates again.

A stronger report may do the opposite, reviving concerns that wage pressure and resilient labour demand will keep policy tighter for longer.

3. Soft data has cooled some rate fears

Wednesday’s releases gave markets a reason to question the hawkish Fed trade.

ADP said private employers added 98000 jobs in June, down from 122000 in May and below expectations.

The ISM manufacturing index also eased to 53.3 from 54, suggesting factory activity is still expanding but losing pace.

The data helped soften the dollar and reduced some urgency around another immediate rate move.

4. Warsh keeps investors guessing

Fed Chair Kevin Warsh gave traders little to work with at the ECB Forum in Sintra.

He reaffirmed the Fed’s 2% inflation target and defended the central bank’s independence, but avoided clear guidance on the July rate decision.

That leaves markets dependent on incoming data. For equity investors, it means payrolls and inflation readings will matter more than central-bank messaging in the near term.

5. Tech weakness remains the pressure point

The cautious futures tone follows a soft regular session on Wednesday. The Dow slipped 0.03%, the S&P 500 lost 0.22% and the Nasdaq Composite fell 0.66%.

Chip and AI-linked shares came under pressure, with Micron Technology and SanDisk among the weaker names.

The AI trade remains the market’s main growth story, but after a strong first half, traders are starting to question how much optimism is already priced in.

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