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5 things to know before the stock market opens Tuesday, Jan. 18

Here are the most important news, trends and analysis that investors need to start their trading day:

1.Nasdaq set to drop as short and long bond yields rise

A trader works on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange at the closing bell January 14, 2022, in New York.

Timothy A. Clary | AFP | Getty Images

2. Activision soars on Microsoft deal to buy the video game giant

A gamer plays the video game ‘Call of Duty: Black Ops’ developed by Treyarch and published by Activision during the ‘Paris Games Week’ on October 25, 2018 in Paris, France.

Chesnot | Getty Images

Microsoft will buy video game giant Activision Blizzard in a $68.7 billion all-cash deal. Activision makes popular game franchises such as “Call of Duty.” Activision has been mired in controversy in recent months due to allegations of sexual harassment and misconduct among company executives. Shares of Activision soared about 37% in premarket trading, before being halted after the Wall Street Journal first reported the deal. Microsoft shares fell more than 2% following the announcement.

3. Goldman Sachs misses on quarterly earnings; shares sink

A Goldman Sachs Group Inc. logo hangs on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange in New York, U.S., on Wednesday, May 19, 2010.

Daniel Acker | Bloomberg | Getty Images

Bank earnings continued Tuesday morning with Dow stock Goldman Sachs reporting a fourth-quarter earnings miss as operating expenses surged 23% from a year earlier. The company’s shares in the premarket dropped 2.8%. Revenue of $12.64 billion topped estimates. On Friday, JPMorgan Chase, also a Dow component, kicked off the quarterly reporting season. Its shares dipped in the premarket after closing down 6% despite better-than-expected quarterly earnings and revenue. JPMorgan’s CFO said the company would likely miss a key profit target in the next two years.

4. Oil prices hit more than seven-year highs after attack on UAE

Satellite photos obtained by the Associated Press on Tuesday showed the aftermath of a fatal attack on an oil facility in the capital of the United Arab Emirates claimed by Yemen’s Houthi rebels. The images by Planet Labs PBC analyzed by the AP show smoke rising over an Abu Dhabi National Oil Co. fuel depot in the Mussafah neighborhood of Abu Dhabi on Monday Jan. 17, 2022.

Planet Labs via AP

U.S. and international oil prices hit more than seven-year highs Tuesday after the United Arab Emirates vowed to retaliate against Yemen’s Iran-aligned Houthi group for Monday’s deadly attack on its capital Abu Dhabi. The UAE is the third-largest oil-producing member of OPEC and world’s seventh-biggest oil producer, pumping just more than 4 million barrels per day. Overnight, West Texas Intermediate crude jumped more than 2% to hit $85.56 per barrel, before trimming those gains.

5. BlackRock’s Fink defends annual letter, delivers stock market call

Laurence “Larry” Fink, chairman and chief executive officer of BlackRock.

Chris Goodney | Bloomberg | Getty Images

BlackRock CEO Larry Fink pushed back against accusations that the asset manager was using its heft and influence to support a politically correct agenda. “Stakeholder capitalism is not about politics. It is not a social or ideological agenda. It is not ‘woke,'” Fink said in his annual letter to corporate leaders, released Monday. Fink reiterated those sentiments in a CNBC interview that ran on Tuesday. He said he’s looking at the “the shape of the yield curve” in the bond market as a signal to where stocks go from here with an “aggressive Federal Reserve over the course of the next two years.”

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Hawkish Fed minutes weigh on riskier assets

A trader works on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) at the start of trading on Monday following Friday’s steep decline in global stocks over fears of the new omicron Covid variant on December 20, 2021 in New York City.

Spencer Platt | Getty Images

LONDON — Global markets turned lower on Thursday as persistent inflationary pressure and fears of a faster-than-expected rise in U.S. interest rates weighed on riskier assets.

Shares in Asia-Pacific fell sharply on Thursday, following in the footsteps of the U.S. overnight. The tech-heavy Nasdaq dropped more than 3% to notch its biggest one-day loss since February, while the Dow Jones Industrial Average registered its first decline of 2022.

European stocks, meanwhile, opened lower on Thursday, extending the global slump. The pan-European Stoxx 600 dropped around 1.4% during early morning deals, with major bourses and all sectors in negative territory.

Tech stocks led the losses, down around 3%, with German software company Nemetschek falling over 6%.

It comes at a time when market participants are already deeply concerned about the rapid global spread of the highly infectious omicron Covid variant, with several countries reporting record daily infections in the last 24 hours.

In Japan, the Nikkei 225 dipped roughly 2.9% as the dash to get out of tech stocks continued to hit high-profile companies. Japan’s Sony Group was last seen trading down 6.8%.

Australian stocks also saw heavy losses as the S&P/ASX 200 fell 2.7%. In mainland China, the Shanghai composite declined 0.25% while the Shenzhen component slipped 0.1%.

MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan traded 1.3% lower.

‘Lingering concerns’ about the Fed

The losses come after minutes from the Federal Reserve’s key December meeting were released on Wednesday. The summary showed the central bank discussed reducing its balance sheet in another move to aggressively dial back its pandemic-era easy monetary policy.

The Fed’s plan to reduce the number of Treasurys and mortgage-backed securities it holds comes as it is already tapering its bond purchases and is set to hike interest rates after the taper concludes.

“We don’t have any more information about what the Fed is thinking than we did several weeks ago,” Brian Nick, chief investment strategist at Nuveen, told CNBC’s “Squawk Box Europe” on Thursday.

“I think at that time what we understood was the Fed on average expected to raise rates three times in 2022, I don’t think anything about that outlook has changed or they have gotten incrementally more hawkish since then. But I do think that maybe investors are, now that we are in the new year, focusing more on that,” Nick said.

“We didn’t see that much of a reaction after the meeting itself, we are seeing one now in terms of the steeper yield curve, a little bit of a stronger dollar but I think just lingering concerns about the Fed may be starting to move a little bit too quickly in shrinking its balance sheet and overtightening this year,” he added.

“If those concerns creep in, and right now I think they are concerns, not alarm, you could see valuations pressured across the board in the equity market which would tend to favor lower valued, more cheaply valued companies.”

The 10-year U.S. Treasury yield topped 1.7% following the release of the minutes. On Thursday, it was trading at 1.7317% around 3:35 a.m. ET. Yields move inversely to prices.

Elsewhere, oil prices lost ground on Thursday morning. International benchmark Brent crude futures traded at $80.32 a barrel, around 0.6% lower, while U.S. West Texas Intermediate futures stood at $77.38, down almost 0.65%.

Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies also dropped on Thursday. Bitcoin was trading at just below $43,200 at 2:59 a.m. ET, down nearly 7% from the 24 hours previous, according to CoinDesk data. It fell as low as $42,503.88 in the last 24 hours, the lowest level in more than a month.

Other cryptocurrencies fell too. Ether dropped nearly 10% to $3,452.58

— CNBC’s Eustance Huang, Jeff Cox & Arjun Kharpal contributed to this report.

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