U.S. stocks rebound for record-setting day after dismal Christmas Eve
U.S. stocks surged Wednesday, recovering all their losses from a Christmas Eve plunge. The Dow Jones industrial average and S&P 500 both set single-day records.
U.S. stocks surged Wednesday, recovering all their losses from a Christmas Eve plunge. The Dow Jones industrial average and S&P 500 both set single-day records.
The software company’s shareholder equity fell below the $2.5 million required to remain on the exchange.
Investors have turned pessimistic about everything from the inevitability of a U.S. recession to growing international trade disruptions and higher loan defaults.
On Wednesday, the Fed is set to announce its fourth rate hike of the year. But after this week, no one is sure what it will do. Neither, most likely, is the Fed itself.
The Dow Jones industrial average sank almost 800 points Tuesday as investors worried that a U.S.-China trade truce reached over the weekend wasn't all it was cracked up to be.
Investment firm LPL Financial has agreed to pay a civil penalty for "various deficiencies" related to supervision of its Indiana operations, the Secretary of State’s office said Monday.
Stocks surged on Wall Street on Wednesday, with huge gains by every major U.S. index, after Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell suggested the central bank might consider a pause in its interest rate hikes next year.
According to research firm CFRA, this is the first time since World War II that the S&P 500 has had two corrections in the same calendar year.
One of the toughest years for financial markets in half a century got appreciably worse Tuesday, with simmering weakness across assets boiling over to leave investors with virtually nowhere to hide.
Stocks were skidding again Tuesday as weak results from retailers and mounting losses for big technology companies pushed the market back into the red for the year.
Volatility has sparked concern with some investors, particularly the group that was hit particularly hard during the most recent financial crisis.
Stocks climbed for the second day in a row Wednesday at the end of a brutal month for the global market.
The rally wiped out a large part of the market’s plunge from the day before, but stocks are still down sharply over the past three weeks.
If you're an investor who was lulled to sleep by the stock market's calm, steady gains this summer, you're wide awake by now.
A quarter of the way through earnings season and 10 months into what is sure to be the biggest year for profit growth this decade, the numbers are strong. The market doesn’t care.
Major market indexes had a dismal day Wednesday, especially the tech-heavy NASDAQ.
U.S. stocks rocketed to their biggest gain in six months Tuesday following strong earnings from major financial and health care companies as well as encouraging reports on the economy.
Shares in Elanco Animal Health Inc. slipped as much as 3.3 percent Monday morning after lead managers and other banks involved in its recent initial public offering started coverage on the animal health company.
The Standard & Poor's 500 index fell more than 2 percent for a second straight day and is now in its longest slide since 2016.
President Donald Trump repeatedly criticized the Federal Reserve over the past 24 hours as markets plunged, saying the central bank was “going loco” with too many interest hikes.