Stocks are moving higher as traders bet on less hawkish Fed.
S&P 500 futures edge higher as US indices react to tariffs. Will February's weak seasonality cap gains?
There is no shortage of warnings about the U.S. stock market's high valuation, but a deeper look into sectors shows quite a bit of variation.
Carter Worth, Worth Charting, talks technical indicators in the S&P 500 and the U.S. Dollar.
Major U.S. equities indexes moved lower to start February trading after U.S. President Donald Trump declared over the weekend that he will impose tariffs on imports from key trading partners Canada, Mexico, and China. However, stocks bounced off their morning lows as Trump announced that tariffs against Mexico would be delayed for a month.
The industrial sector is one area of the U.S. stock market that looks favorable to Wells Fargo Investment Institute after new tariffs on Canada, Mexico and China.
The report showed that economic activity in the manufacturing sector expanded after 26 consecutive months of contraction.
A North American trade war has begun, with 25% duties on goods imported from Canada and Mexico.
The S&P 500 (^GSPC) offers two distinct versions — the traditional market cap-weighted index and the equal-weighted index (^SPXEW, ^SP500EW) — each serving different analytical purposes. But what's the key difference between these two approaches?
Chris Rokos is the founder of London-based hedge fund Rokos Capital Management.
Packaging Corp. of America anticipates various headwinds in the first quarter of 2025.
Companies with minimal exposure to the infrastructure buildout narrative should be fairly safe if the AI trade keeps going south.