Stock futures fell Tuesday after the Dow Jones Industrial Average registered its longest losing streak since 2018. Futures tied to the Dow fell 218 points, or 0.4%. S&P 500 futures edged 0.3% lower, while Nasdaq-100 futures ticked down 0.2%. The moves followed a mixed session on Wall Street. The Dow dipped 0.25%, or nearly 111 points, falling for an eighth straight day for the first time since June 2018. The Nasdaq Composite gained 1.2% and hit a fresh record, while the S&P 500 edged up nearly 0.4%. The gains for the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq came without the cooperation of market bellwether Nvidia, which pulled back 1.7%. Shares of the chip giant are down more than 4% this month, even as the broader indexes and semiconductor names such as Broadcom have touched new highs. AlphabetApple and Tesla also hit all-time highs on Monday, while the S&P’s tech and consumer discretionary sectors closed at records. Traders await the Federal Reserve’s next rate decision, slated at the conclusion of the central bank’s final 2024 two-day policy meeting Wednesday. The gathering kicks off Tuesday. Traders are pricing in a 95% chance of a quarter-point cut Wednesday, according to CME Group’s Fed Watch tool. Insight into future policy moves from the meeting and Chair Jerome Powell’s press conference following the meeting, however, remain key focal points for Wall Street. As the end of 2024 approaches, investors also remain focused on prospect of a rally into year-end after another strong performance for stocks that has pushed all the major indexes to new highs. “The market does like to climb a wall of worry,” CFRA’s chief investment strategist Sam Stovall said Monday on CNBC’s “Closing Bell: Overtime.” “Historically, following an up year in the S&P 500, you want to let your winners ride.” Since 1990, he noted that the top three sectors in a given calendar year tend to outperform in the next year by about 300 basis points on average 75% of the time. But the potential of tariffs under President-elect Donald Trump’s new administration could be a reason for some concern heading into 2025. “If you are going to worry about something, it is that the tariffs are not just talk but truisms, and that we will actually be putting up barriers to trade,” Stovall said. “If that is an actuality, I think that could be a very big problem.” U.S. Treasury yields moved slightly higher on Tuesday, as investors parsed economic data due ahead of the Federal Reserve’s next interest rate decision. The yield on the 10-year Treasury was up by less than 1 basis points at 4.407%. The 2-year Treasury yield was last more about 2 basis points higher at 4.266%. Asia-Pacific markets were mixed Tuesday, tracking mixed gains on Wall Street as investors look toward the U.S. Federal Reserve’s decision stateside. Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 traded 0.78% higher to close at 8,314. Japan’s Nikkei 225 and Topix fell 0.24% and 0.37% to close at 39,364.68 and 2,728.2 respectively. South Korea’s Kospi slipped 1.29% to close at 2,456.81, while the Kosdaq dropped 0.58% to end the trading day at 694.47. Chinese leaders have decided to increase the country’s budget deficit to 4% of GDP in 2025 in a bid to keep economic growth at around 5% next year, Reuters reported Tuesday. China’s CSI 300 traded 0.26% lower to close at 3,922.03, while Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index traded 0.16% lower. Oil prices were down on Tuesday as China’s economic data renewed demand concerns, while investors remained cautious ahead of the U.S. Federal Reserve’s interest rate decision. Brent crude futures eased 79 cents, or 1.07%, to $73.12 a barrel, while U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude was down 89 cents, or 1.26%, at $70.27 a barrel. Gold eased on Tuesday, pressured by a firmer U.S. dollar and Treasury yields, as investors looked ahead to the Federal Reserve’s interest rate decision amid expectations it will adopt a cautious approach to monetary policy easing next year. Spot gold was down 0.5% at $2,639.22 per ounce. U.S. gold futures shed 0.6% to $2,654.10.