A Stock Market Rotation of Historic Proportions Is Taking Shape
By Karen Langley The stock market has suddenly turned upside down. The market's laggards have sprung to life in recent days, while the seemingly impervious "Magnificent Seven" group of technology
Bank of America: Everyone believes in a rate cut and a trade with Trump, so it's time to "buy rumors, sell news".
Bank of America's Chief Strategist Michael Hartnett believes that market risk appetite is rotating, rather than receding, and expects funds to flow from the US dollar to gold, from large-cap stocks to small-cap stocks, and the market will shift from momentum trading to volatility trading.
What to Expect in the Week Ahead (Google and Tesla Earnings; GDP and PCE Data)
This week, investors should keep an eye on earnings reports from several key players, including Google and Tesla. Key economic data to watch for will include the release of the first estimate of second-quarter gross domestic product and the Federal Reserve's preferred inflation measure for June.
Won't Get Fooled Again - Fed Wants Inflation to Cool Further Before Cutting Interest Rates
A cautious Fed has been burned before The U.S. economy has downshifted. The jobs market has cooled. And inflation is slowing again. So what's the Federal Reserve waiting for?
NASDAQ is experiencing a major correction, where can you hide? The Dow Jones, gold, and US bonds are all falling, but bitcoin remains 'strong'.
Market style has changed due to factors such as improved prospects for Trump's campaign and increased expectations for interest rate cuts.
US stocks closed with all three major indices falling, with the S&P Nasdaq index seeing its largest weekly decline in three months. Technology stocks weakened, with Tesla down more than 4%, Nvidia down more than 2%, and CrowdStrike down more than 11%.
Investors accelerated their escape from technology stocks, with stocks and bonds in Europe and the United States being hit hard for two days. This week, the S&P 500 and Nasdaq fell by about 2% and 3.7%, respectively. The Nasdaq stopped its six-week continuous rise, while the Dow and small-cap indices rose by 0.7% and 1.7%, respectively. Chip stocks fell more than 3% on Friday and nearly 9% for the week. Nvidia also fell more than 8.7% for the past three months, making it the worst performer. The "seven sisters of technology" all fell for the week, and cybersecurity leader Crowdstrike, which triggered a global technology outage, fell 11% on Friday, the worst in nearly two years. The VIX panic index rose more than 32% for the week.
'Blue Screen of Death' Adds to Tech Pain on Summer Friday | Wall Street Today
U.S. stocks pulled back Friday, as the largest IT crash in history sent tech even lower for there week following a semiconductor sector pullback.
Mega-Cap Technology Stocks Push US Equity Indexes Lower Friday
US equity indexes fell Friday as a continuing downdraft in technology proved to be a drag amid a global IT outage.The $Nasdaq Composite Index(.IXIC.US)$ declined 0.9% to 17,710.2, with the $S&P 500
Treasury Yields Rise While U.S. Indicators Cool Down -- Market Talk
Treasury yields rise but remain close to multi-month lows as this week's data shows a weakening economy that could allow the Federal Reserve to start cutting interest rates in September. The central
Plug Power Shares Decline 16% After Detailing Pricing of $200M Share Offering
By Denny Jacob Plug Power shares declined 16% after detailing the pricing of its previously announced $200 million public share offering. Shares were trading around $2.47, extending losses from after-
The probability of Donald Trump returning to the White House has surged, prompting bond investors to sell long-term US bonds in unison.
Bond fund managers from large institutions are all selling long-term US bonds. This is mainly because they are worried that Trump's trade and fiscal policies may push up inflation and US debt levels over time.
Two officials of the Federal Reserve indicated that it is necessary to reform the discount window tool.
Boorman, a director of the Federal Reserve, and Logan, the president of the Dallas Federal Reserve, suggested that the Federal Reserve should assess to what extent its emergency lending tools can meet the liquidity needs of the banking system, implying the need to reform the discount window.
Latest data! The two largest "creditors" of China and Japan are massively selling off US debt, while the United Kingdom is increasing its shareholding by $13.1 billion.
China's debt holdings in May approached the lowest point since 2009.
Wall Street Today | Market Faces Second-Day Pullback
The overall market pulled back for the second day in a row Thursday after a semiconductor sell-off Wednesday.
S&P 500, Nasdaq and Dow Jones Industrial Average All Sink Thursday
The market eased Thursday, adding to a semiconductor sell-off on Wednesday.
OpenAI Reportedly Rolls Out Smaller, Cheaper Iteration of Flagship AI Model
ChatGPT-maker OpenAI unveiled on Thursday GPT-4o mini, a smaller, cheaper version of its most capable AI model, GPT-4o, according to media reports.The new model will be available Thursday for free
Fed Rate Cuts Aren't Imminent as Labor Market Data Comes With Caveats - Vanguard
TSM, Nvidia, Tesla Climb Thursday Morning | Herd on Wall Street
Morning traders, happy Thursday, July 18th we celebrated the grand opening of the moomoo JC office today! My name is Kevin Travers, and here are stories from the moomoo herd on Wall Street today.
Underlying Details of 20-Year U.S. Treasury Bond Auction Were Strong
0605 GMT - Demand for the U.S. Treasury's $13 billion auction of 20-year bonds on Wednesday slowed from the previous auction, which had particularly strong statistics, but the underlying details
The Table Turns: Five Sessions of Falling AI Semiconductors While Dow Climbs
The market pulled back Wednesday, as AI and semiconductor stocks pulled back hard while slower-growing stocks on the Dow Jones led the index to a fresh closing and intraday high.