Delta, Walmart, Apple: Stocks to watch today

April 9, 2025

In This Story

AAPL-4.98%WMT-2.43%DAL-3.78%STZ-0.94%TSLA-4.90%

Investors were digesting the latest volley in the U.S.-China trade fight early Wednesday, with a 104% tariff on Chinese electric vehicles and other tech goods taking effect overnight.

The renewed trade tension added fresh anxiety to a day already packed with earnings from Delta Air Lines (DAL-3.78%) and Constellation Brands (STZ-0.94%), worrying signals from Walmart (WMT-2.43%) and Apple (AAPL-4.98%), and a wave of big-bank results on deck.

Tariffs hammer tech

Premarket moves among the Magnificent Seven tech stocks were broadly lower Wednesday, with Tesla (TSLA-4.90%) off 1% and Apple slipping 2% in early trading. Amazon (AMZN-2.62%), Microsoft (MSFT-0.92%), and Nvidia (NVDA-1.37%) were also in the red. The renewed tariff war and surging yields have weighed heavily on growth names, reversing much of the sector’s 2025 momentum.

Bond yields also surged, with the 30-year Treasury topping 4.75% — its highest since mid-February. “If Trump’s secret agenda is to crash the stock market to bring down long-term interest rates, the plan already failed,” economist Peter Schiff wrote on X. “The plan to crash the stock market is now crashing the bond market too.”

Delta Air Lines plans to reduce capacity

Delta kicked off the day with better-than-expected earnings, posting adjusted EPS of $0.46 versus the $0.38 expected by Wall Street. Adjusted revenue came in at $12.98 billion, matching forecasts, while net income jumped to $240 million, up from $37 million a year earlier. Shares rose more than 2% in premarket trading.

But while the headline numbers suggest resilience, Delta also said it plans to reduce flight capacity in the second quarter, signaling caution amid rising costs and shifting travel patterns. The airline cited the need to “restore operational reliability” and more tightly manage fuel and labor expenses.

Cracking a Corona — or cutting back? Constellation knows

Constellation, the beverage giant behind Corona, Modelo, Kim Crawford, and Robert Mondavi, will report after the bell, with analysts expecting EPS of $2.27 on $2.12 billion in revenue. Watch for commentary on U.S. beer and wine sales — consumer staples that often shift in tone during periods of economic stress. Results could offer clues about household confidence as inflation lingers and real wages cool.

Shifting retail signals from Walmart and Big Lots

Early Wednesday, Walmart said it was pulling its Q1 guidance due to uncertainty surrounding newly imposed Trump tariffs on Chinese goods, particularly electric vehicles and consumer electronics. The move underscores how trade policy is clouding visibility for even the most dominant U.S. retailers.

Meanwhile, Big Lots (BIG) also reports earnings today, though its place on the OTC market is a reminder of how far it’s fallen. Once a national discount heavyweight, Big Lots was delisted from the NYSE late last year and now trades as a penny stock. Its collapse adds to the growing wave of “retail wreckage” — from Red Lobster’s closures to Macy’s and Foot Locker (FL-7.66%), both of which are shuttering hundreds of stores across the country.

Together, these developments highlight the pressure facing retailers: rising input costs, unpredictable trade policy, and a consumer base increasingly cautious about spending.

Bank earnings incoming

The first-quarter results from JPMorgan Chase (JPM+1.13%) and Wells Fargo (WFC-0.14%) land Friday. Analysts will be watching for loan growth, consumer credit quality, and recession contingency plans. With rate cut expectations pushed deeper into the year, margin commentary will be critical. These earnings may also help set the tone for Q2 investor sentiment.