Tuesday turned out to be one of those days where the inflation numbers looked fine, but the market decided to have a bad day anyway. The Dow Jones tumbled nearly 400 points as investor sentiment cooled off, though not enough to push the Fear and Greed Index out of its comfortable "Greed" zone.
The December Consumer Price Index delivered exactly what economists expected: a 2.7% year-over-year increase that matched the prior month's reading. Core CPI, which strips out volatile food and energy prices, actually came in slightly below expectations at 2.6% year-over-year. So why the selloff? Sometimes markets just need an excuse to take profits.
Earnings Season Kicks Off With Mixed Results
The real drama came from corporate earnings. JPMorgan Chase (JPM) managed to beat earnings estimates but still dropped more than 4% as investors fixated on weaker investment-banking fees and management's cautious tone about loan growth prospects. It's a reminder that beating expectations doesn't always mean winning over Wall Street.
Meanwhile, Delta Air Lines (DAL) slid over 2% after issuing soft forward guidance. The airline cited cost pressures and what it called a "normalization" in post-pandemic travel demand, which is corporate speak for "people aren't spending quite as freely as they were."
Sector Performance Tells a Mixed Story
Despite the headline indices falling, most sectors on the S&P 500 actually closed higher on Tuesday. Energy, consumer staples, and real estate stocks posted the biggest gains. But consumer discretionary and financial stocks bucked the trend and dragged the broader market lower.
When the dust settled, the Dow Jones closed down around 398 points at 42,191.99. The S&P 500 fell 0.19% to 6,963.74, while the Nasdaq Composite slipped just 0.10% to 23,709.87.




