Previous Close | 33.98 |
Open | 34.08 |
Bid | 0.00 |
Ask | 0.00 |
Strike | 325.00 |
Expire Date | 2021-09-17 |
Day's Range | 34.56 - 34.56 |
Contract Range | N/A |
Volume | 6 |
Open Interest | N/A |
Stocks resurged Thursday afternoon after Bloomberg reported that U.S. negotiators had reached terms of a phase one trade deal that now awaits approval from President Donald Trump
Top news and what to watch in the markets on Thursday, December 12, 2019.
The incumbent prime minister Boris Johnson is headed for a clear majority, according to a Reuters exit poll. The Conservative and Unionist Party to which Johnson belongs has won 243 seats, the results published as of press time.
DEEP DIVE (This is the second in a three-part series listing highly rated stocks that sell-side analysts expect to rise the most over the next 12 months. Part 1 covers large-cap stocks and Part 3 covers small-caps.
How should you position your portfolio for 2020? Here are some ideas.
President Donald Trump signed off on a phase one trade deal with China on Thursday that delays $160 billion in new tariffs on Chinese imports that were scheduled to take effect Sunday, according to Bloomberg reporter Jennifer Jacobs. Trade advisors were meeting Thursday afternoon with Trump to discuss the deal. U.S. negotiators offered to cut tariffs that are already in place on Chinese goods in half and suspend the Dec. 15 tariffs in order to strike a deal, according to Bloomberg.
JPMorgan sees a robust environment for stocks in 2020, with bonds, gold, other commodities, and currencies lagging.
Micron Technology (MU) reports fiscal Q1 2020 earnings after market close on December 18. Can they deliver on gross margin?
The Bond King is re-calibrating his recession forecast for late 2020 Continue reading...
On the headline Initial Jobless Claims number, we see something of a surprise: a jump of 49K new claims, pushing it to 252K from the previous week's unrevised 203K.
Style Box ETF report for DEUS
The bullish trends in the S&P 500 index will likely continue heading into the New Year powered by the Fed's accommodative interest-rate policy and a resilient domestic economy.
The Federal Reserve is expected to maintain its target interest rate range at between 1.5% and 1.75% on Wednesday afternoon when it releases its post-meeting statement at 2 p.m. Investors will be watching for any surprise changes to rates and indications from the Fed about where rates could be heading in 2020 after three rate cuts in 2019. The bond market is currently pricing in an overwhelming 97.2% chance the Fed takes no action on rates and just a 2.2% chance if a rate hike, according to CME Group. Tom Essaye, founder of Sevens Research Report, said this week he expects no change to interest rates and very little deviation in the Fed’s statement from a month ago.
Several highly-touted IPOs have crashed in price, but a top-rated fund manager sees opportunities to pick up bargains amid the wreckage.
As stocks remained steady ahead of the Fed announcement, we analyze a bearish signal on the indexes and look at micro-cap resilience.
Stocks ended Tuesday’s trading session lower in a chopping day of trading following a report that the U.S. and China are looking to delay tariffs set to go into effect Sunday.
Portfolio Manager Bill Hench details which areas of health care he finds attractive for his small-cap deep value strategy Continue reading...
Morgan Stanley warns that investors betting on upbeat U.S. economic data will get some nasty surprises in early 2020.
Commentary from Arnold Van Den Berg's firm Continue reading...
By Scott Van Den Berg Continue reading...
The hustle and bustle of the holidays could open up to more gains in the S&P 500 for the new year as global investment firm JP Morgan is expecting 2020 to be a strong showing for U.S. equities. “The business ...
The Democrat-led U.S. House on Tuesday introduced two articles of impeachment against President Donald Trump, one alleging abuse of power and a second for trying to impede the congressional investigation of that alleged abuse. It is an impeachable offense for a president to use the power of his office to obtain a personal benefit while ignoring or injuring American interests, Rep. Jerry Nadler of New York, chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, said in a short, solemn news conference in Washington.
Distrust of banks and governments has high net worth individuals buying bullion and storing them in their vaults.