Wall Street stocks have tumbled as ongoing fears of artificial intelligence-related disruption and the fallout from Friday's US Supreme Court ruling sent investors fleeing from high risk equities
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A broad selloff sent all three major US stock indexes more than one per cent lower by the closing bell on Monday, as risk appetite was dampened by a combination of persistent fears over potential disruption due to emergent artificial intelligence technology and Trump's erratic statements on trade policy, which fuelled much of the market volatility during the first year of the president's second term.
Financial stocks and software-related firms underperformed the broader market.
"The question about AI is twofold: How much is it going to cost, and who all is going to be disrupted?" said Tom Hainlin, national investment strategist at US Bank Wealth Management in Minneapolis.
"You've seen the market react to headlines, it's 'sell first, assess later.'"
"It's a perspective of what may happen as opposed to what has happened."
On Friday, the top court in the nation issued a 6-3 ruling that Trump overstepped his presidential authority by enacting reciprocal tariffs under an economic emergency law, a ruling that provoked condemnation from the president, who threatened a 15 per cent temporary tariff on all imports, despite having reached trade agreements with many US trading partners.
Gold prices advanced, benefiting from a flight to safety.
"The Supreme Court decision wasn't unexpected," Hainlin added.
"But you put these uncertainties on top of each other, the heightened geopolitical situation in the Middle East, tariff uncertainty, and potential AI displacement and that's leading investors to a broad risk reassessment."
A powerful winter storm buried much of the US under more than 15 inches of snow and paralysed travel in the Northeast.
At airports in the New York City area, 89 per cent to 98 per cent of flights were canceled, according to Flightaware.com. Airlines and travel/leisure-related stocks tumbled. Dow Transports also lagged.
With only 77 of the companies in the S&P 500 yet to post results, fourth-quarter earnings season has neared the finish line, a smattering of high-profile companies are expected to report this week, most notably vanguard artificial intelligence chipmaker Nvidia due on Wednesday.
Home improvement rivals Home Depot and Lowe's are also on the docket, which is rounded out by Salesforce and Universal Health Services.
Of the companies that have reported, 73 per cent have beaten expectations, and analysts now expect aggregate year-on-year S&P 500 earnings growth of 13.9 per cent, significantly higher than the 8.9 per cent forecast as of January 1, according to LSEG data.
According to preliminary data, the S&P 500 lost 70.31 points, or 1.02 per cent, to end at 6,839.20 points, while the Nasdaq Composite lost 251.46 points, or 1.10 per cent, to 22,634.61.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 810.81 points, or 1.65 per cent, to 48,815.16.
Among the 11 major sectors of the S&P 500, financials were down the most, while consumer staples enjoyed the largest percentage gain.
The healthcare index advanced, with a boost from Eli Lilly after rival Novo Nordisk's obesity drug CagriSema underperformed Eli Lilly's drug Zepbound in a head-to-head trial.
Among other movers, Domino's Pizza surged after the fast-food chain's fourth-quarter same-store sales beat Wall Street estimates. PayPal jumped following a Bloomberg report that the payments firm is attracting takeover interest.
Australian Associated Press
