Meta and Tesla rally after-hours, while Microsoft slides. Stock futures edge higher—will the gains hold? Full market analysis inside.
U.S. stock futures moved marginally higher on Thursday following the latest flurry of U.S. economic reports. Investors received the first reading on Q4 GDP. The data showed the U.S. economy expanded at a pace of 2.
In early trading on Monday, shares of Kraft Heinz topped the list of the day's best performing components of the Nasdaq 100 index, trading up 4.3%. Year to date, Kraft Heinz has lost about 0.5% of ...
Investors react to the Federal Reserve's policy decision and Chairman Jerome Powell's press conference, as well as results from Meta, Microsoft and Tesla.
Nasdaq 100 dips as Powell’s Fed decision, Nvidia’s AI battle, and key earnings from Microsoft, Tesla, and Meta set the market tone. Volatility ahead!
S&P 500 futures are up 0.5%. Dow Jones Industrial Average futures are gaining 0.4%. Nasdaq 100 futures are rising 0.7%. On Wednesday, the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 137 points, or 0.31%, to 44,
Dow Jones futures edged lower early Thursday, while S&P 500 futures and Nasdaq futures rose modestly. Tesla, Meta Platforms, Microsoft headlined a huge slate of Wednesday night earnings, with ServiceNow and IBM also key.
Stocks rose on signals the main engine of the world’s largest economy remains solid, which bodes well for the strength of Corporate America.
The US Federal Reserve decided to hold its key interest rate steady on Wednesday (January 29), maintaining it in the range of 4.25%-4.5%. The decision by the central bank’s Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) came as anticipated,
Dow Jones futures fell Thursday ahead of weekly jobless claims. Meta and Tesla stock rallied on fourth-quarter earnings.
A Chinese AI company, DeepSeek, sparked a significant decline in Wall Street's tech sector, with major losses for Nvidia and the Nasdaq composite. Dee
Foreign exchange markets have an eye on central bank meetings in the US and Europe, but the big market mover may be earnings at Microsoft, Tesla and Meta.