By Anora Mahmudova and Carla Mozee, MarketWatch

Morgan Stanley disappoints; Delta and Halliburton top estimates

NEW YORK (MarketWatch) -- U.S. stocks moved sharply lower on Tuesday, amid escalating nervousness in global markets, which has seen investors flock to haven assets such as gold and government bonds.

A renewed slide in oil prices stoked fears of spreading global deflation, with investors increasingly skeptical about the ability of central banks to combat it.

The European Central Bank, is widely expected to announce its bond-buying program on Thursday, however, the scope may disappoint investors.

U.S. markets were closed on Monday in observance of the Martin Luther King Jr. holiday.

The S&P 500 (SPX) drifted about 12 points lower, with consumer discretionary and healthcare sector stocks leading the losses. All 10 main sectors were trading lower.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJI) fell about 140 points, with more than two-thirds of its 30 components trading lower. Johnson & Johnson was the top decliner among the blue chips, falling nearly 3%.

The Nasdaq Composite (RIXF) also was off down about 30 points.

10-year Treasurys rallied, sending the yield down 8 basis point to 1.76%. The yield on the benchmark debt steadily declined over the past 12 months.

"The big elephant in the room is deflation and many portfolio managers are beginning to adjust their models to work in a low interest rate environment. That adjustment period spells volatility," said Marty Leclerc, chief investment officer of Barrack Yard Advisors.

Leclerc stressed that in the short-term, current environment will be favorable for stocks, as investors may justify higher price-to-earnings ratios when the real interest rates is at zero.

Peter Cardillo, chief market economist at Rockwell Global Capital, said today's action is all about global economy slowing.

"We are in the midst of earnings and markets are not reacting to positive results, and the culprit is concern about Asia and Europe. The bond market is afraid of deflation, which is why we are seeing such low yields on long-dated Treasurys," Cardillo said.

In economic news, a gauge of confidence among home builders ticked down this month by one point to 57, staying close to the highest level since late 2005, according to National Association of Home Builders/Wells Fargo data released Tuesday morning. Readings above 50 signal that builders, generally, are optimistic about sales trends.

Homebuilder stocks were down sharply. PulteGoup Inc. (PHM), and D.R. Horton Inc. (DHI) both fell more than 4%.

Stock futures had been climbing after better-than-expected economic data from China, whose gross domestic product expanded 7.4% last year, beating market expectations of 7.2%. Still, that marked the slowest rate of growth since 1990 for the world's second-largest economy. Meanwhile, European equities were trading around seven-year highs ahead of an expected unleashing of a sovereign bond-buying plan by the European Central Bank when policy makers meet on Thursday.

Earnings results: Morgan Stanley's (MS)quarterly results missed analyst expectations and shares fell.

Delta Air Lines Inc. (DAL) shares jumped after the company beat estimates,reporting fourth-quarter revenue of $8.24 billion, up 4.6%.

Halliburton Co. (HAL) shares fell after the company reported better-than-expected results, but warned that 2015 could be a challenging year for the oil-field servicing company, which is planning to acquire Baker Hughes Inc. (BHI)

Consumer products heavyweight Johnson & Johnson (JNJ) beat profit expectations, but sales fell shy of estimates. Shares fell more than 3%.

SAP SE (SAP) dropped its midterm profit margin forecast and reported a 1% decline in fourth-quarter profit, hurt by its shift to cloud-based products.

Google Inc. (GOOG) is close to investing about $1 billion in Space Exploration Technology Corp. to support its effort to deliver Internet access via satellites, according to The Wall Street Journal. Space X is backed by Tesla Motors Inc. (TSLA) chief Elon Musk.

Twitter Inc.(TWTR) in a blog post Tuesday said it's buying India-based mobile-marketing company ZipDial for an undisclosed sum.

DreamWorks Animation SKG Inc.(DWA) last week started letting workers go, The Wall Street Journal reported.

Other markets: Chinese stocks rose nearly 2% after Monday's selloff and Japan's Nikkei Average closed 2.1% higher, its strongest percentage gain in a month.

Gold futures (GCG5) were up more than 1.5%. Oil futures (CLH5) fell more than 4%, trading at about $47 a barrel.

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