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Dow Jones Today: DJIA Rallies on Wall Street’s Bullish Outlook as Trump Speaks with Xi
The Dow Jones (DJIA) is trading in positive territory on Monday, led by a surge in tech and AI-related stocks amid bullish forecasts for 2026 from
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Dow Jones, S&P, Nasdaq, Wall Street Futures, AI Trade Shows Signs of Fracturing; Dell Lifts Outlook; Deere Earnings on Deck – What’s Moving Markets
U.S. stock futures ticked higher early Wednesday as investors assessed shifting dynamics in the artificial intelligence trade. Dell Technologies (NYSE:DELL) lifted its full-year outlook on the back of soaring demand for AI-focused servers,
Wall Street indexes climbed as futures trading resumed after a temporary outage. Discover the latest market updates and trends.
Investors are now forecasting that the Federal Reserve will cut interest rates at its next meeting, scheduled for Dec. 10.
The Dow’s large drop on Thursday was fairly rare in the wake of its close at a fresh record high, according to Dow Jones Market Data
More swings hit Wall Street on Friday, except the U.S. stock market finished higher this time. After bobbing up and down through the morning, the S&P 500 took off and rallied nearly 2% before finishing with a gain of 1%.
In late September, Fed Chair Powell delivered a speech in Rhode Island, where he was questioned about the variables the Fed's Board of Governors considers when making monetary policy decisions. In particular, he was asked if movements in the stock market factor into the central bank's decision-making process.
Wall Street experienced gains driven by strong tech performances and expectations of a Federal Reserve rate cut in December. Nvidia and Dell Technologies contributed to easing market fears. The S&P 500,
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Wall Street drops to one of its worst days since April on worries about AI stocks and interest rates
The U.S. stock market is slumping as superstars swept up in the mania around artificial-intelligence technology keep weakening. The S&P 500 fell 1.5% Thursday.
Indeed, JPMorgan Chase analysts estimate U.S. large-cap stocks will return 6.7% annually over the next 10 to 15 years. And Goldman Sachs analysts estimate the S&P 500 will return 6.5% annually over the next decade, with downside and upside scenarios from 3% annually to 10% annually.
After a mixed start to the day, the three major U.S. stock-market indexes were all trading higher on the day. The Dow Jones Industrial Average was leading the three indexes, with the S&P 500 following and the Nasdaq Composite recently breaking positive.