U.S. market stocks continue to fall Thursday as investors become increasingly wary about the future of President Donald Trump's impeachment inquiry and what that could mean for foreign trade agreements and Trump administration plans.

Here's how the U.S. markets rested Thursday:

Nasdaq Composite Index (QQQ): -0.58% or 46.72 points

Dow Jones Industrial Average (DIA): -0.28% or 76.20 points

S&P 500 Index (SPY): -0.24% or 7.20 points

With the White House Whistleblower complaint details being released this morning by the House Intelligence Committee and Bloomberg earlier reporting that the U.S. is not likely to extend a waiver that allows some U.S. firms to continue selling to China's Huawai Technologies, it is unclear where the future of global trade and domestic markets are heading as the U.S. government is in a legal conundrum.

Until more information is released for the impeachment inquiry, the driving force behind the markets continue to be the usual released economic data. Waiting for the news over the inquiry is like a storm that is in sight, but is not yet hitting the ships that are the stock markets.

In U.S. economic news, second-quarter GDP rose an expected 2.0%, according to the Bureau of Economic Analysis. Personal consumption downwardly revised from the reported gain of 4.7% to the actual gain of 4.6%.

In sector news, Energy and Consumer Discretionary are down today following the uncertainty around global trade's continuation. Meanwhile, technology and real estate climbed today, with the National Association of Realtors releasing data stating that pending homes sales in August raised to a better-than-expected rate of 1.6% after a decline of 2.5% in July.

In oil news, crude oil prices have stabilized after the wild September weeks after the U.S. imposed sanctions on some Chinese shipping firms, U.S. Treasury announced late Wednesday. Brent crude oil is currently priced at about $61.73 per barrel and West Texas Intermediate Crude being priced at $56.53 per barrel.

Tomorrow's market update will entail the major changes of the week as well as follow the continuation of impeachment news as the U.S. government releases information.