By Bansari Mayur Kamdar and Johann M Cherian
(Reuters) -U.S. stock index futures were steady on Wednesday after Goldman Sachs reported second-quarter results, while investors also assessed strong earnings from a number of smaller banks.
Goldman Sachs slipped 0.4% in volatile premarket trading after the Wall Street giant posted a fall in second-quarter profit as it took a writedown tied to its GreenSky business and the investment banking business was hit by lower dealmaking volumes.
Big U.S. lenders rallied on Tuesday after they said higher interest rates had helped boost profits in the second quarter.
"Investors don't know what to do with Goldman," said Dennis Dick, market structure analyst at Triple D Trading.
"The numbers weren't as terrible, but they definitely weren't good."
The S&P 500 banking index has fallen 3.4% this year in the aftermath of a banking crisis that took down three lenders and pummeled the regional banking sector.
The benchmark S&P 500 index has notched an 18.6% gain in the same period.
Among other lenders, Citizens Financial and M&T Bank beat Wall Street estimates for second-quarter profit, benefiting from the U.S. Federal Reserve's rapid rate hikes.
Citizens Financial slipped 0.4%, while M&T Bank rose 4.2%.
At 7:35 a.m. ET, Dow e-minis were up 7 points, or 0.02%, S&P 500 e-minis remained unchanged, and Nasdaq 100 e-minis were up 22.5 points, or 0.14%.
Tesla rose 0.5% ahead of results expected after the bell. Its strategy to boost sales through price cuts is likely to have powered its strongest revenue growth in five quarters while dragging down margins to a three-year low in the April-June period.
The electric carmaker will kick off the earnings season for megacap growth and technology companies whose outsized gains have driven the tech-heavy Nasdaq up 37.2% so far in 2023.
Credit Suisse raised its year-end target on the benchmark S&P 500 to 4,700 from 4,050, citing a decline in the near-term U.S. recession risk and a stronger earnings outlook for the largest technology-related companies.
Results from Netflix and IBM later in the day are also on investors' radar.
Shares of Microsoft edged 0.6% higher, a day after the Windows-maker hit an all-time high on announcing it would charge more to access new artificial intelligence features in its Office software.
AT&T rose 5.0% after the telecom company said it does not intend to immediately remove lead cables from Lake Tahoe pending further analysis. Peer Verizon also added 4.0%.
Elevance Health advanced 4.8% after the health insurer forecast upbeat annual profit, while Carvana rose 27.4% as the used-car retailer said it entered into an agreement with noteholders to cut total debt outstanding by over $1.2 billion.
VMware added 7.6% after UK's competition regulator provisionally cleared Broadcom's $69 billion deal to buy the cloud service provider.
Meanwhile, a Reuters poll showed economists expect the Federal Reserve to raise its benchmark interest rate for the last time for the current cycle by 25 basis points on July 26.
(Reporting by Bansari Mayur Kamdar and Johann M Cherian in Bengaluru; Editing by Saumyadeb Chakrabarty and Maju Samuel)