VIDEO: WSJ Market Wrap: Feb. 6, 2015
U.S. stocks fell Friday, but were still poised to post their largest weekly gains in two years, as Twitter shares rose 16% on improved revenue.
U.S. stocks fell Friday, but were still poised to post their largest weekly gains in two years, as Twitter shares rose 16% on improved revenue.
The Dow industrials gave up gains and the S 500 moved lower. Meanwhile, Chipotle forecast weaker sales. Photo: AP.
U.S. stocks edged higher in afternoon trading Monday, as energy stocks advanced and investors shook off data showing slowing activity in the U.S. manufacturing sector. Photo: Getty.
U.S. stocks edged higher in afternoon trading Monday, as energy stocks advanced and investors shook off data showing slowing activity in the U.S. manufacturing sector. Photo: Getty.
U.S. stocks rose alongside oil prices Thursday, as upbeat corporate earnings reports helped spur consumer stocks higher. Photo: Getty.
U.S. stocks fell Tuesday after disappointing results at blue-chip companies like Microsoft and Caterpillar sparked concerns about the strong dollar’s drag on earnings growth. Geoff Rogow joins the News Hub.
Markets remained open despite a blizzard hitting the Northeast and are expected to open on Tuesday. WSJ’s Sara Murray reports. Photo: AP.
Jack Hough previews Barron’s magazine, including a look at the Barron’s roundtable and investing in a lost year for growth. Photo: Getty.
The slump in oil prices continued to weigh on global markets Monday, hammering the Russian ruble in particular. Elsewhere, Japan’s credit rating was downgraded by Moody’s. WSJ’s Katie Martin reports. (Photo: Getty)
With an unstable market and the Fed’s expected wind-down of it Quantitative Easing program, J.P. Morgan Private Bank’s Heather Loomis explains where investors can find opportunities. Photo: Getty
U.S. stocks tumbled to their lowest levels since mid-August, as investors retreated from risky assets amid growing worries about global growth. WSJ’s Steven Russolillo reports on the News Hub with Sara Murray.
Marketwatch’s Chuck Jaffe points out as the calendar is just hitting the home stretch for the year, it’s time to recognize that virtually everyone who made calculated forecasts for 2014 was wrong. Photo: Andrew St. Clair for The Wall Street Journal.
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