U.S. stocks fall on Friday after the White House says Canada, Mexico and China tariffs will start Saturday. Still, major indexes finish January ahead.
Stocks surrendered early gains and turned negative on Wall Street after the White House said President Donald Trump would impose promised tariffs on some key U.S. trading partners. The S&P 500 fell 0.
"The move higher in Tesla shares bore no relation whatsoever to the company's financial performance in the quarter," JPMorgan wrote.
The New York Stock Exchange is looking to trade for 22 hours a day — raising thorny questions about how equity markets function
Investors are bracing for a looming hit to U.S. corporate profits and pressure on inflation if President Donald Trump makes good on his tariff threats, with markets seen as not fully factoring in risks from higher levies on foreign imports.
And despite historically high valuations, most Wall Street analysts expect the stock market to continue moving higher in the remaining months of the year. Here's what investors should know. Most Wall Street analysts anticipate strong returns in 2025 Shown below are year-end targets for the S&P 500 in 2025 set by various Wall Street banks and research firms.
The Apollo Diversified Credit Securitize Fund (ACRED) will offer on-chain investors access to a vehicle with an investment thesis focused on five pillars: Corporate Direct Lending, Asset-Backed Lending, Performing Credit, Dislocated Credit, and Structured Credit.
Wall Street's main indexes rose on Thursday, driven by post-earnings advances in Meta and Tesla, although Microsoft's weak cloud forecast and downbeat results from Cigna dampened investor enthusiasm. Microsoft MSFT.O dropped 4.7% after forecasting disappointing growth in its cloud computing business.
Here’s why this story is so treacherous from a standpoint if you’re betting against US AI and companies like Nvidia.
Stocks surrendered early gains and closed lower after the White House said President Trump would impose promised tariffs on some key U.S. trading partners