Wall Street is poised to take another wild swing -- this time to the downside -- as futures point to another selloff on Tuesday.
Wall Street and the world's other leading equity markets were in the red Monday as COVID-19 continued to advance unchecked worldwide.
Longtime Warren Buffett associate and investor Charlie Munger considers domestic political and financial upheavals as equally impactful to the U.S. market as coronavirus and Chinese investing habits.
The chart compares selected major indices that are considered benchmarks in their respective markets.
U.S. stocks finished mixed on Friday as Santa Claus took a breather.
Wall Street will likely set net record highs this week despite the political discord gripping Washington and the confusing signals from the trade war front.
Trade talks to end Trump's trade war against China are collapsing with new tariffs set to be imposed on Oct. 15.
Modest open likely for U.S. markets Wednesday after key equity gauges including Dow Jones futures were down on Wednesday morning. The trigger for the day will be the Fed's announcement of policy and rate cuts if any.
Wall Street's three indices Thursday almost broke its record on a spate of encouraging news.
Hong Kong's leader's decision to withdraw an extradition law and the British Parliament's decision to block a hard exit from the EU sent stocks higher.
Higher open likely for Wall Street Friday after important U.S. stock index futures jumped on Friday morning.
Wall Street again pounces on a morsel of good news to stage another rally.
A media storm is raging over whether or not president Donald Trump actually received a phone call from China offering to re-start stalled trade talks.
U.S. retail giants lead a Wall Street rally despite a second inversion of a benchmark Treasury yield curve.
Modest open likely for the U.S. markets Tuesday after the main U.S. stock index futures looked flat on Tuesday morning.
Wall Street rallied somewhat Monday but the action now seems to be shifting towards small caps.
Higher open expected for the Wall Street on Monday after key stock index futures looked up on Monday morning.
Trump refuses to accept blame for causing Wednesday's Wall Street bloodbath and instead blames the U.S. Federal Reserve.
Lower open expected for Wall Street Tuesday after the U.S. stock index futures looked lower on Tuesday morning. The market mood has been hit by steep losses in the previous session.
Fears Trump's trade war against China is now a full-blown economic conflict sent Wall Street into a huge downward spiral Monday.
The Dow and the S&P 500 recover from Monday's crippling losses amidst a volatile market.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average took its biggest dive of the year after China retaliated against Trump's latest tariff.