Wall Street falls
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The Dow fell as global oil prices posted their steepest climb since May.
Wall Street’s rally is facing a fresh Middle East test before the opening bell. US stock futures slid on Wednesday after President Donald Trump said the Iran peace memorandum was “over”, sending oil prices higher and putting renewed pressure on technology shares.
Alphabet joined the Dow, but investors shouldn't take their eyes off Coca-Cola, one of the index's most dependable dividend names.
Major stock indexes slid and oil prices jumped Wednesday after President Donald Trump said he thought the U.S.’s ceasefire with Iran was “over” and threatened further strikes.
Dow opens flat as Wall Street heads for a strong quarterly finish. S&P 500 and Nasdaq eye best quarter in six years. Oil, Fed outlook and bank downgrades keep investors cautious. Wall Street opened little changed on Tuesday as investors entered the final trading session of the quarter.
Alphabet (GOOGL) will join the Dow Jones Industrial Average, replacing Verizon (VZ) on June 29, furthering the index's AI focus. GOOGL's inclusion may drive index fund and ETF buying, potentially boosting its share price and increasing Dow's tech weighting.
The Nasdaq fell hard on Tuesday. One stock's wild reversal kept it from falling harder. Yep, you probably guessed the name already.
Most U.S. stocks rose, and the Dow Jones Industrial Average set another record, but more drops for chip stocks and other AI winners kept indexes mixed. The S&P 500 finished basically unchanged on Thursday,
Wall Street's major market averages were mixed on Tuesday at open, after Monday's strong session where the Dow Jones Industrial Average closed at a record high above 52,000 for the first time. Easing tensions between the U.
Almar Latour is Chief Executive Officer of Dow Jones and Publisher of The Wall Street Journal.
SpaceX trading losses on Tuesday didn’t appear to have much to do with space fundamentals. Instead, technical factors created volatility. Elon Musk’s AI and space company entered the Nasdaq-100, one of the best-known large-cap growth indexes that tracks the largest nonfinancial companies listed on Nasdaq.
