Stocks Set for Minor Pullback

Tech shares and blue chips are slightly lower after the long holiday weekend.
By Sarina Penn ,

Stock index futures were pointing to a lower open for Wall Street Tuesday as traders emerged from the long weekend in an uneasy mood following last week's big pullback.

S&P 500

futures were losing 2 points to 1371 and were nearly 5 points under fair value. Futures on the Nasdaq 100 were flat at 1958 and were 3 points below fair value.

In the prior session, stocks capped off a losing week with another slide as oil got back on an upward track and dismal news surfaced on the corporate front. In the end, the

Dow Jones Industrial Average

plunged 146 points to 12,480, and the S&P 500 lost 18 points to 1376. The

Nasdaq Composite

shed 20 points at 2445.

Among companies in the new session,

Infineon Technologies

( IFX) announced after the German market closed Monday that CEO Wolfgang Ziebart

has resigned

"due to different opinions on the future strategic orientation of the company." The chip company said Peter Bauer, a member of the management board, will assume the role of spokesman for that body.

Also departing will be the chief of Britain-based

Vodafone

(VOD) - Get Report

, which preliminarily announced that its full-year adjusted operating profit climbed 5.7% to $19.9 billion on a 14.1% jump in sales. CEO Arun Sarin will step down in July and be replaced by Vittorio Colao.

Elsewhere, a Belgian business paper reported that Belgian beer giant

InBev

could start merger negotiations with Budweiser purveyor

Anheuser-Busch

(BUD) - Get Report

as early as today. On Friday, the

Financial Times

said it was preparing a bid worth $46 billion, or $65 a share.

As for analyst actions, Citigroup upped

American Axle

(AXL) - Get Report

to buy from hold after Friday's news that striking workers at the company had finally voted to accept an amended employment agreement and go back to work. The three-month strike had idled several

General Motors

(GM) - Get Report

plants, as American Axle is one of GM's main parts suppliers.

GM, on the other hand, was cut to hold from buy at Citi. The automaker said Friday that the strike had cost it $1.8 billion before taxes in the second quarter.

Separately, KeyBanc Capital Markets upgraded oil-and-gas name

Newfield Exploration

(NFX)

to buy from hold, and

Knight Transportation

(KNX) - Get Report

was lifted to outperform at Wachovia.

A bit later, investors will be looking for fresh clues on the state of the American consumer as the Conference Board puts out its May consumer-confidence numbers. The report is due at 10 a.m., as are new-home-sales data from the Commerce Department.

Among commodities, crude oil was up $1.21 to $133.40 a barrel, and gold futures were rising $2.70 to $923.10 an ounce. The U.S. dollar firmed by 0.1% against the euro at $1.5756 and tacked on 0.4% against the yen to 103.80.

Treasury prices were falling. The 10-year note was off 5/32 in price to yield 3.86%, and the 30-year bond sank 15/32 in price, yielding 4.60%.

Foreign markets were mixed. The Nikkei 225 in Tokyo bounced 1.5% overnight, and Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index climbed by 0.6%. In Europe, however, the FTSE 100 and Germany's Xetra Dax each surrendered 0.4%. The Paris Cac slid 0.8%.

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