Oil prices drop 9% and Wall Street rallies to a record
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Stock market bulls see signs rally could endure
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Major stock gauges rallied hard on Friday as potential peace talks calmed instability fears that have rocked markets for weeks.
Last time momentum measures were this high indices saw notable pullbacks in the next few weeks
On April 17, 2026, a Greenland-approved control shift over Tanbreez puts this rare earth explorer in sharper investor focus.
It has been a week to remember for S&P 500 (^GSPC) fans.The S&P 500's round trip from a near correction (-9%) to a new all-time closing high this week was the fastest since 2020 at only 54 trading days,
The Nasdaq was cruising this morning, on pace for its 11th consecutive daily gain, and the Dow was struggling to keep up. The tech-heavy index was up 0.9%. The Dow was down 133 points, or 0.3%. The S&P 500 was up just 0.
Friday's big news was a ceasefire between Israel and Lebanon, which led to Iran's foreign minister declaring the strategic Strait of Hormuz "completely open" for commercial traffic. Oil prices fell more than 10%,
Nasdaq sets its own new high after 11th straight increase as investors look past Mideast conflict
Market experts say the latest recovery for stocks, which now has indexes at new highs, has been more fast-paced than the bounce following last year's Liberation Day. "So as far as the stock market is concerned,
Every weekday the CNBC Investing Club with Jim Cramer holds a "Morning Meeting" livestream at 10:20 a.m. ET. Here's a recap of Wednesday's key moments. 1. The major averages were mixed Wednesday. The blue-chip Dow was down about 200 points,
Robinhood slipped as Schwab’s crypto push raised new competition, even as the SEC’s removal of the pattern day trader rule positions the platform for higher retail trading activity.