Stock market today: Dow ekes out gain, snapping longest losing streak in 50 years
Stocks are looking to bounce back from their worst day since the summer.
Stocks are looking to bounce back from their worst day since the summer.
Exchange-traded funds are rewriting the financial playbook, with 2024 marking a historic year for the industry. From record-breaking flows to innovative fund launches, Bank of America detailed $1.6 trillion in ETF inflows this year in a new note. The global ETF market has grown to a staggering $15.1 trillion in assets under management. Additionally, ETF launches hit an all-time high of 1,485 in 2024, and institutional ownership continues to surge, cementing ETFs as the cornerstone of modern inve
Wall Street's top three indexes ended nearly flat after a steep decline Wednesday based on the Fed's 2025 outlook.
(Bloomberg) -- As the currency craters in Brazil, thrusting the country’s markets into the international spotlight for the first time in years, a grim reality is setting in for top economic aides to President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva. They are, they fear, powerless to do much to stop the panic.Most Read from BloombergNew York City’s Historic Preservation Movement Is Having a Midlife CrisisNYPD Car Chases Are Becoming More Frequent — and More DangerousDakar’s Air Quality Plummets as Saharan Dust
The S&P 500 slipped 0.1% on Thursday, Dec. 19, 2024, as stocks struggled to recover from the prior day's sell-off despite upbeat data on economic growth.
Shares of Nike were up more than 10 percent in the initial moments in after hours trading on Thursday.
Investors may be protecting themselves in case the President-elect swings big on tariffs and is serious about mass deportations.
FedEx shares jumped in extended trading Thursday after the shipping giant said it would spin off its Freight business as a standalone company.
As Congress scrambles to avert a potential partial government shutdown before Friday's deadline, investment experts weigh in on how much a shutdown could impact the markets.
Thursday’s selloff in long-dated U.S. government debt pushed 10- and 30-year yields further into their highest closing levels in almost seven months, creating a setup that threatens to lead to another big selloff in stocks in the days or weeks to come.