Stocks fall Tuesday as Wall Street resumes sell-off, Snap drags tech lower

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Wall Street points toward lower open after Monday's rebound

Stocks fell Tuesday morning as the markets struggled to sustain a comeback rally following weeks of losses.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 220 points, or 0.7%. The S&P 500 dipped 1.3%, and the Nasdaq Composite dropped 2.2%.

Snap shares plummeted more than 36% after the company said it's bracing to miss earnings and revenue targets in the current quarter and warned of a hiring slowdown. Shares of Meta Platforms followed Snap lower, falling 6%, while Pinterest lost 17%.

"Stocks are getting hit hard this morning and the main culprit is the Snap warning from Monday evening," wrote Adam Crisafulli of Vital Knowledge. "Some are a bit incredulous that a relatively small and perennially unprofitable ephemeral social media firm can take down the whole tape, but given how sensitive this tape is, SNAP is able to punch above its weight."

"Tech still dominates the market, both numerically (it remains the biggest weighting) and psychologically, and despite aggressive liquidation in the last couple of months, people still own a lot of it," he added.

Shares of major tech companies reliant on advertising spend followed Snap lower. Alphabet and Netflix each slid about 6%. Amazon fell 3% and Apple was down more than 1%.

"We expect all online ad platforms to feel some impact of a significant consumer pullback," wrote Morgan Stanley analysts after the Snap warning. "Advertising is cyclical."

Meanwhile, Zoom Video shares added 2% after the company issued strong guidance for the second quarter.

Retail earnings continue this week and investors are eager to see how high inflation is affecting consumer demand, and if last week's disappointments from big box retailers were company specific or reflections of the whole sector.

On Tuesday shares of apparel maker Abercrombie & Fitch dropped 27% after reporting that freight and product costs weighed on sales for the fiscal first quarter. Best Buy shares initially popped after the company reported a mixed quarter, but was last less than 1% lower. Retailers were among the top gainers in the S&P 500 Monday.

The moves came a day after the market staged a rebound from last week's steep market sell-off, which saw the Dow hit its first eight-week losing streak since 1923, and the S&P 500 briefly fall into bear market territory on an intraday basis.

Stocks rallied during Monday's regular trading session as the Dow jumped 618 points, or nearly 2%, following a week of sharp losses. The S&P 500 rose 1.9%, and the Nasdaq Composite gained 1.6%. The moves left investors wondering whether the bounce can hold or if it was yet another minor relief rally amid the relentless sell-off that has yet to reach a bottom.

"This kind of environment where you've got the whipsaw and ups and downs that are so big is a trading environment where it can feel on any given day like you were wrong yesterday and that is ripe for mistakes," Sofi's head of investment strategy Liz Young told CNBC's "Closing Bell: Overtime."

Investors are looking ahead to new home sales and a speech from Fed Chair Jerome Powell at the National Center for American Indian Enterprise Development summit on Tuesday. Nordstrom and Ralph Lauren are also slated to report earnings.