U.S. stock futures traded mixed on Tuesday as markets reacted to the latest updates in President Donald Trump’s ongoing trade negotiations. While tariff tensions simmer in the background, corporate-specific catalysts dominated early trading sentiment.
At 06:30 ET, Dow Jones Futures dipped 0.1%, S&P 500 Futures were flat, and Nasdaq 100 Futures gained 0.2%.
Below are the top premarket U.S. stock movers:
1. Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN) | +0.3%
Amazon shares edged higher as the company launched its extended four-day Prime Day event. Analysts at Adobe Analytics forecast U.S. consumers will spend $23.8 billion, marking a 28.4% year-over-year surge in digital spending. The extended format is expected to drive strong conversion rates, especially among younger Prime members.
Use the Earnings Calendar API to track Amazon’s upcoming earnings announcement and Prime Day impact.
2. Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA) | +0.9%
Tesla shares rebounded slightly after a steep decline Monday. Investor concerns over CEO Elon Musk’s launch of the “America Party” are being partially offset by bargain-buying. However, policy headwinds remain a concern, especially as the newly passed “Big, Beautiful Bill” threatens EV tax credits and regulatory incentives.
For deeper insights into Tesla’s revenue composition and regulatory credit exposure, use the Revenue Product Segmentation API.
3. Oracle (NYSE:ORCL) | +1.2%
Oracle saw gains after Jefferies raised its price target, citing a “clear glide path from mega-deals to revenue acceleration.” Investor focus remains on AI integration and cloud growth momentum.
4. Robinhood (NASDAQ:HOOD) | +0.8%
Robinhood rose as CEO Vlad Tenev confirmed regulatory discussions in Europe over the platform’s tokenized equities feature. Despite scrutiny from firms like OpenAI, Robinhood plans to expand this feature globally.
5. Enphase Energy (NASDAQ:ENPH) | -3.0%
6. SolarEdge Technologies (NASDAQ:SEDG) | -5.3%
Both stocks declined sharply after President Trump’s executive order aimed at repealing solar and wind tax credits, which is expected to slow new project investments.
7. JPMorgan Chase (NYSE:JPM) | -0.3%
8. Goldman Sachs (NYSE:GS) | -0.4%
HSBC downgraded both banks to “reduce” from “hold,” citing limited upside amid policy uncertainty and weak forward yield curve expectations.
9. Ciena (NYSE:CIEN) | -3.4%
Ciena fell after Morgan Stanley downgraded it to “underweight,” highlighting margin stagnation and slow top-line growth in optical networking.
Despite global trade risks and political noise, investor attention remains fixed on corporate execution, macro-sensitive sectors, and innovation-led growth. The evolving regulatory climate—from renewable incentives to tokenized securities—adds a layer of complexity for stock pickers in this market.
Want real-time access to future earnings events or company segment data? Consider integrating the Earnings Calendar and Revenue Segmentation APIs for dynamic portfolio monitoring.