“If the stock market sentiment switches, then I think you’ll recognize that Alphabet’s giving you the consistency that Nike or Kroger used to give us at a very inexpensive price,” the “Mad Money” host said.
When the market soared right after Election Day, many analysts attributed it to a “Trump bump”: Investors were buying stocks in anticipation of tax cuts, deregulation and other policies that would help corporate bottom lines. So with much of Trump’s …
U.S. stocks fell Thursday as technology firms and small companies skidded. Investors bought high-dividend stocks, which pulled the market away from steeper losses.
U.S. equities closed lower on Thursday as large-cap technology stocks faced renewed pressure. The Dow Jones industrial average fell about 15 points, with Goldman Sachs contributing the most losses.
Shares of Booz Allen Hamilton sank as much as 13 percent in after-hours trading after the government services firm revealed in a regulatory filing it was the subject of a federal civil and criminal probe in connection with its finances.
Should big technology stocks known as FAAMG or FAANG be bought now that they’re a few dollars cheaper? Or should they be sold now because they’re expensive and upward momentum is broken?
Shares of Apple (aapl, -0.60%) have been more bruised than those of other Silicon Valley heavyweights by a technology stock selloff this week, with many on Wall Street cautious following the iPhone maker’s rally in recent months. While its stock may …
The iPhone chipmakers’ stumbles come amid Apple’s own stock woes. Apple consolidated for several weeks, and appeared to be on its way toward sketching a short flat base.
Snap stock hit an all-time low on Thursday, closing at $17 per share – which was the company’s IPO price. The stock has dropped 30 percent in value since it closed at $24.48 on its first full day of trading in March. [Kurt Wagner/ Recode]. An Uber …
FILE PHOTO: A woman stands in front of the logo of Snap Inc. on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) while waiting for Snap Inc. to post their IPO, in New York City, New York, U.S.
As a result of interest rates being chronically low for several years, yield-seeking investors have flocked to blue-chip dividend growth stocks. Consequently, finding value in best-of-breed dividend growth stock stalwarts has become extremely difficult.
U.S. stock futures indicated a small rise at the open, keeping a key technology gauge on track for a weekly loss, as investors looked ahead to housing-starts and consumer sentiment data.
Shares of Celsion Corp. CLSN, -25.45% rocketed 42% in premarket trade Friday, after the cancer drug development company filed to withdraw plans for a stock offering. The company had originally filed on April 5 an S-1 statement with the Securities and …
Kroger Co.’s stock KR, -18.89% plunged 18.8% in active morning trade Thursday to pace NYSE decliners, putting them on course to suffer the biggest one-day selloff this millennium, in the wake of the grocery chain’s disappointing profit outlook.
bluebird bio Inc. BLUE, -1.47% has been on a wonderful run following its presentation at the American Society of Clinical Oncology meeting on June 5. Although the stock pulled back on Monday, it snapped right back $2.80, or 2.5%, to $112.60, on 922,700 …
A recent slump in technology stocks worsened on Thursday, dragging on major U.S. indexes, while investors fretted about the economy’s health after the Federal Reserve lifted interest rates.
Stocks opened down hard on Thursday, with tech stocks leading the early selling as analyst actions and economic news each played roles in the market’s early declines.
That money you see sloshing around in the U.S. stock market? It belongs to the robots. At least, that’s the picture emerging from a growing divergence between quantitative funds and discretionary managers.
Social media giant Twitter TWTR has not been immune to the recent tech sector volatility, and shares of the perpetually struggling stock have dipped more than 4% since the sell-off began last Friday. Of course, that means Twitter has made out better …
Cliff Asness, an influential quant hedge-fund manager, is trying to debunk the notion that the stock market is all that dependent on the performance of a handful of big-tech names.
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