Sherry Paul, Morgan Stanley private wealth advisors and senior portfolio manager, joins CNBC's 'Closing Bell' to discuss market outlooks.
Wall Street hit new records as Donald Trump began his second term as 47th U.S. president this week. The S&P 500 index — as tracked by the SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust (NYSE:SPY) — climbed above 6,100 points,
Solar and batteries constructed by Softbank’s SB Energy are expected to power at least part of the Stargate project, according to a Bloomberg report.
Looking for tech stocks poised to soar in 2025? Check out two undervalued companies that could offer incredible long-term value to investors.
Netflix, Oracle and other tech stocks lifted U.S. indexes as their profits pile higher and excitement builds around AI's moneymaking prospects.
S&P 500 valuations are priced for perfection, trading at a premium relative to historical averages. Click to read.
Inflation data came in better than expected this morning. Treasury yields fell, sending tech and AI stocks higher. The market found relief after concerns of inflation reverting higher led ...
As Trump began a second term, tech stocks led the market, driven by semiconductors' momentum and a surge in artificial intelligence investments.
Tomorrow, the BLS will publish its Consumer Price Index (CPI) report -- and the related read on inflation will likely spur big movement for stocks again. CPI reports have recently been even bigger market movers than the PPI reports, and investors will be looking to the report to weigh the macroeconomic backdrop for growth stocks.
NVIDIA Corporation NVDA has been around for decades. However, with the advent of artificial intelligence (AI), the company has witnessed explosive business growth. In the past year, NVDA stock has surged 149%, becoming one of the top S&P 500 performers of 2024.
The company's share price was up 11% as of 11 a.m. ET and had been up as much as 14.9% earlier in the daily session. Meanwhile, the S&P 500 index was up 1.6% and the Nasdaq Composite index was up 2.1%.
Netflix shot up 14.6% after it reported adding nearly 19 million subscribers during the holiday-season quarter and it topped sales and profit targets. The video streaming service’s expansion into live programming appears to be paying off as it wrapped up its best year ever with more than $40 billion in revenue.