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After a 199-point fall, the Dow Jones Industrial Average shed 0.8 percent, with Intel leading blue-chip losses that included 27 of 30 components.
The S&P 500 lost 1 percent, with energy the worst performing and all 10 main sectors in the red.
The Nasdaq dropped 0.7 percent.
For every share rising, more than two fell on the New York Stock Exchange, where 551 million shares exchanged hands by 3:50 p.m. Eastern. Composite volume neared 3.1 billion.
On the New York Mercantile Exchange, crude futures shed 91 cents to $97.38 a barrel, a six-month low; gold futures finished the floor session by settling down $3.70 at $1,284 an ounce, then turned higher in electronic trade.
The U.S. dollar advanced against other global currencies and the 10-year Treasury yield held steady at 2.479 percent.
Stocks had opened lower and continued their declines in
the wake of better-than-expected U.S. economic reports, which heightened
speculation that the Federal Reserve might hike rates sooner than
expected.
The Institute for Supply Management's service index climbed to 58.7 in July for its highest reading since December 2005, while a separate survey found orders for U.S. factory goods rising 1.1 percent in June.
The data showed "continued strength in the overall economy, and people are reading it as the Fed is going to raise rates soon, that is part of what has markets in a funk right now," said Paul Nolte, senior vice president and portfolio manager at Kingsview Asset management.
The upbeat reports on the economic rebound "again brings the policy of the Federal Reserve front and center and that is why good economic news is not translating into better stock-market performance," emailed Peter Boockvar, chief market analyst at the Lindsey Group.
Economic data from outside the United States Tuesday had China's services purchasing managers' index dropping to 50.0 in July from 53.1 in June, with the disappointing report somewhat countered by separate numbers showing expansion in the euro-zone's service sector.
"We had some economic news out of Europe this morning that was not that bad, and then the Chinese service index actually receded, so mixed economic activity abroad," said Peter Cardillo, chief market economist at Rockwell Global Capital.
Read MoreTuesday could show that bulls are back in business
On Monday, stocks climbed, with the S&P 500 bouncing back from its biggest weekly hit since 2012, as companies including Berkshire Hathaway reported results.
Read MoreUS stocks end higher; Dow halts 4-day loss streak
The Institute for Supply Management's service index climbed to 58.7 in July for its highest reading since December 2005, while a separate survey found orders for U.S. factory goods rising 1.1 percent in June.
The data showed "continued strength in the overall economy, and people are reading it as the Fed is going to raise rates soon, that is part of what has markets in a funk right now," said Paul Nolte, senior vice president and portfolio manager at Kingsview Asset management.
The upbeat reports on the economic rebound "again brings the policy of the Federal Reserve front and center and that is why good economic news is not translating into better stock-market performance," emailed Peter Boockvar, chief market analyst at the Lindsey Group.
Economic data from outside the United States Tuesday had China's services purchasing managers' index dropping to 50.0 in July from 53.1 in June, with the disappointing report somewhat countered by separate numbers showing expansion in the euro-zone's service sector.
"We had some economic news out of Europe this morning that was not that bad, and then the Chinese service index actually receded, so mixed economic activity abroad," said Peter Cardillo, chief market economist at Rockwell Global Capital.
Read MoreTuesday could show that bulls are back in business
On Monday, stocks climbed, with the S&P 500 bouncing back from its biggest weekly hit since 2012, as companies including Berkshire Hathaway reported results.
Read MoreUS stocks end higher; Dow halts 4-day loss streak
—By CNBC's Kate Gibson
Coming Up This Week:
Wednesday
Earnings: Time Warner, Mondelez International, Chesapeake Energy, Devon Energy, Viacom, AOL, Molson Coors Brewing, Devon Energy, DishNetworks, Ralph Lauren, Transocean, 21st Century Fox, Keurig GreenMountain, CenturyLink, Jack in the Box, Zulily, ING
8:30 a.m. International trade
Thursday
Earnings: Wendy's, Orbitz, CBS, Monster Beverage, News Corp, Nvidia, Mylan Labs, AMC Networks, Zynga, Lionsgate, Sprouts Farmers Market, Windstream,Duke Energy, Sempra Energy, Stratasys, Teradata, Computer Sciences, GreatPlains Energy
Weekly chain store sales
8:30 a.m. Initial claims
3:00 p.m. Consumer credit
Friday
Earnings: Brookfield Asset Management, Buckeye Partners,Petrobras
8:30 a.m. Productivity and costs
10:00 a.m. Wholesale trade
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Coming Up This Week:
Wednesday
Earnings: Time Warner, Mondelez International, Chesapeake Energy, Devon Energy, Viacom, AOL, Molson Coors Brewing, Devon Energy, DishNetworks, Ralph Lauren, Transocean, 21st Century Fox, Keurig GreenMountain, CenturyLink, Jack in the Box, Zulily, ING
8:30 a.m. International trade
Thursday
Earnings: Wendy's, Orbitz, CBS, Monster Beverage, News Corp, Nvidia, Mylan Labs, AMC Networks, Zynga, Lionsgate, Sprouts Farmers Market, Windstream,Duke Energy, Sempra Energy, Stratasys, Teradata, Computer Sciences, GreatPlains Energy
Weekly chain store sales
8:30 a.m. Initial claims
3:00 p.m. Consumer credit
Friday
Earnings: Brookfield Asset Management, Buckeye Partners,Petrobras
8:30 a.m. Productivity and costs
10:00 a.m. Wholesale trade
More From CNBC.com:
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