* Durable goods data on tap, seen rising 2 percent
* Bank of America off premarket, extending recent slide
* Futures down: Dow 70 pts, S&P 8.7 pts, Nasdaq 12 pts
* For up-to-the-minute market news see [STXNEWS/US] (Adds analyst comment, Toll Bros earnings, updates prices)
By Ryan Vlastelica
NEW YORK, Aug 24 (Reuters) - U.S. stock index futures were lower on Wednesday following a sharp rally in the previous session as the market displayed little trend except volatility ahead of the upcoming Federal Reserve meeting.
Hopes that Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke would announce new stimulus for a struggling U.S. economy fueled Tuesday's 3 percent rally.
A Washington Post article grabbed market attention overnight, playing down the likelihood Bernanke would announce big plans to boost the economy in a speech on Friday. [FED/AHEAD]
"The Washington Post story is why the S&P is giving back some of its gains," said John Brady, senior vice president at MF Global in Chicago. "The movement in risk assets suggests disappointment over the idea that there will be no new policies, and that should hinder domestic bank performance."
Bernanke will speaks at a central bank conference in Jackson Hole, Wyoming that starts Thursday. Analysts are divided on how much room the Fed has for further stimulus.
Bank of America Corp
Concerns about the economy's strength and the euro zone's sovereign debt crisis have sparked sharp volatility in the past two weeks, and the magnitude of Tuesday's rally echoed the steep moves.
S&P 500 futures
Investors looked ahead to July data on durable goods, seen up 2 percent on orders for cars and planes, reversing a weak June, when orders fell by 1.9 percent. The data is due at 8:30 a.m. EDT (1230 GMT).
MF Global's Brady said the data was unlikely to move markets unless it was weaker than expected, as the airplane orders were seen giving a strong headline number.
In earnings news, Toll Brothers Inc
Applied Materials Inc
Delta Air Lines Inc
U.S. stocks shot higher Tuesday on hopes for Fed action, giving investors hope that a four-week rout was ending. Technology and other growth stocks drove most of the gains, with the Nasdaq rising more than 4 percent. (Editing by Jeffrey Benkoe)