Stock futures sagged as investors rotated out of interest-rate sensitive technology shares. U.S. government bond yields hit their highest level in three months. Oil prices hit three-year highs. Here’s what we’re watching ahead of the opening bell.
- Tech stocks including
and
—all sensitive to the outlook for interest rates because profits are expected to grow far into the future—fell by 1% or more each in premarket trading.
-
rose 3.4% premarket. The auto maker plans to spend $7 billion to build two battery factories in Kentucky and a third in western Tennessee—part of a collaboration with SK Innovation—as well as a factory for producing electric trucks.
-
shares gained 1.8% premarket.
is in advanced talks to buy Acceleron, according to people familiar with the matter, in a move that would bolster the pharmaceutical giant’s rare-disease business. Merck shares ticked down 0.2% premarket.
-
fell 1.7%. The music and podcast-streaming company has started its first global brand campaign to court marketers, part of an effort to expand revenues from advertising.
-
fell by more than 3% ahead of the bell. Shares of the Covid-19 vaccine maker have almost quadrupled this year, but the runup has stalled in recent weeks.
- Activist hedge fund Starboard Value has a more-than-8% stake in
and plans to agitate for change at the chemicals producer, The Wall Street Journal reported. Huntsman shares rose more than 5% premarket.
-
and
were among the firms to get a boost from rising prices for oil and gas prices.
gained 0.7%. Energy is the best-performing sector in the S&P 500 this year.
- Shares of chip companies including
and
slipped ahead of the bell. Micron is due to report earnings Tuesday. The latest threat to supply chains for semiconductors: High coal prices and efforts to curb energy consumption in China.
- Entertainment giant Endeavor Group has agreed to buy an online sports-betting business from game developer
for $1.2 billion in cash and stock. Endeavour jumped more than 6% premarket. Scientific rose 0.7% premarket.
-
gained 5.1% ahead of the bell. The business-services company’s quarterly profit more than doubled and revenue rose 20% from the year earlier.
Chart of the Day
- Banks are on pace this year to merge at a level not seen since the 2008 financial crisis. It is a turnaround from last year, when the economy spiraled and many regional and community banks put merger plans on the shelf. Now, bank executives are feeling more certain about what the future holds, but some are finding it hard to make it on their own.
Write to Joe Wallace at joe.wallace@wsj.com
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