Top related persons:
Top related locs:
Top related orgs:

Search resuls for: "Stock Market"


25 mentions found


Signage for the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) is displayed outside the central bank's headquarters in Singapore. The Monetary Authority of Singapore announced that the review group will evaluate measures to "improve the vibrancy" of the Singapore equities market. MAS said on Friday the panel will focus on addressing market challenges, fostering listings, and facilitating market revitalization, as well as enhancing regulations to facilitate market growth and foster investor confidence. It said another key goal will be to identify methods for encouraging private sector participation, including from capital market intermediaries, investors and listed companies. "Improving the attractiveness of Singapore's equities market can therefore enhance Singapore's standing as a vibrant enterprise and financial hub," the MAS said, adding that this will also "[complement] Singapore's innovation and start-up ecosystem, private markets, as well as asset and wealth management sectors."
Organizations: Monetary Authority of Singapore, MAS Locations: Singapore, Singapore's
A pedestrian looks at an electronic stock board outside a securities firm in Tokyo, Japan, on Tuesday, Dec. 25, 2018. Japan's stock markets have hit a six-month low, declining for two straight days, after the Bank of Japan raised benchmark interest rates to their highest level since 2008. Speaking to CNBC's "Squawk Box Asia," Bruce Kirk, chief Japan equity strategist at Goldman Sachs said that the Japanese market rally had reached a "transitional phase." Yes, there's a fundamental shift taking place in the market, but it's not unusual," Kirk said. "I think people are now looking for areas that are more domestic demand focused, and that's really putting the interest back on Japan's small [and] mid-caps."
Persons: Bruce Kirk, Goldman Sachs, Kirk Organizations: Bank of Japan, Nikkei, CNBC Locations: Tokyo, Japan
Following the trade, Jim Cramer's Charitable Trust will own 700 shares of AVGO, increasing its weighting in the portfolio to 3.16% from 2.94%. The stock market is headed for another rough day as concerns about the economy grow. As a subscriber to the CNBC Investing Club with Jim Cramer, you will receive a trade alert before Jim makes a trade. THE ABOVE INVESTING CLUB INFORMATION IS SUBJECT TO OUR TERMS AND CONDITIONS AND PRIVACY POLICY , TOGETHER WITH OUR DISCLAIMER . NO FIDUCIARY OBLIGATION OR DUTY EXISTS, OR IS CREATED, BY VIRTUE OF YOUR RECEIPT OF ANY INFORMATION PROVIDED IN CONNECTION WITH THE INVESTING CLUB.
Persons: Jim Cramer's, payrolls, Ben Reitzes, Dell, Lisa Su, Jim Cramer, Jim Organizations: Broadcom, AVGO, Federal Reserve, VMware, Intel, Melius Research, HP, AMD, CNBC Locations: U.S
Job growth in the U.S. slowed much more than expected during July and the unemployment rate ticked higher, the Labor Department reported Friday. The unemployment rate edged higher to 4.3%, its highest since October 2021. "Temperatures might be hot around the country, but there's no summer heatwave for the job market," said Becky Frankiewicz, president of the Manpower Group employment agency. From a sector standpoint, health care again led in job creation, adding 55,000 to payrolls. The labor force also contracted by 214,000, though the participation rate as a share of the working-age population actually edged higher to 62.7%.
Persons: Nonfarm payrolls, Dow Jones, Becky Frankiewicz Organizations: Labor Department, Stock, Manpower Group Locations: U.S
It’s rare for Russian criminal hackers to land in U.S. prisons and even rarer for them to get out early. But two of the eight Russians released in Thursday’s prisoner swap with the U.S. are seasoned cybercriminals. It is believed to be the first time the U.S. has released international hackers in a prisoner exchange, according to cybercrime experts and a review conducted by NBC News. The two convicted Russian hackers, Vladislav Klyushin and Roman Seleznev, are in their early 40s. Natalia Kolesnikova / AFP - Getty ImagesThat was true for the men released Thursday.
Persons: Evan Gershkovich, Vladislav Klyushin, Klyushin, Seleznev, Todd Carroll, “ It’s, ” Carroll, , , “ I’m, Natalia Kolesnikova, Philip Reiner, they’ve, Vladimir Putin’s Organizations: U.S, Kremlin, Wall, ., NBC News, FBI, Getty, Institute for Security, Technology Locations: U.S, United States, Russia, Russian, Sverdlovsk Regional, Yekaterinburg, AFP, Sion , Switzerland, Seleznev, Maldives
Stocks sold off Thursday, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average tumbling nearly 500 points, as investors’ fears over a recession surfaced. The 10-year Treasury yield broke below 4% for the first time since February in a sign that more investors were seeking safe-haven assets. That weak data comes a day after the Fed chose to keep rates at the highest levels in two decades. “The economic data keep rolling on in the direction of a downturn, if not recession, this morning,” said Chris Rupkey, chief economist at FWDBONDS, a financial market research company. The S&P 500 is still up about 14% for the year, coming off its eighth-positive month in the last nine in July.
Persons: Stocks, , Dow, Russell, Jerome Powell, , Chris Rupkey, JPMorgan Chase, Meta Organizations: Dow Jones, Nasdaq, Federal, Treasury, JPMorgan, Boeing, Meta, Nvidia Locations: U.S
Indexes slid on Thursday despite a strong earnings report from Meta that sent the stock soaring. New jobless-claims data beat expectations and approached a one-year high, stoking economic concern. Investors are pricing in a 100% chance of Fed rate cuts in September. Shares of Meta soared as much as 11% after the company beat earnings estimates in the most recent quarter and raised its full-year revenue guidance. Qualcomm also beat earnings expectations but saw its stock down 3% Thursday.
Persons: , Jerome Powell, Powell Organizations: Service, Meta, Wednesday's, Qualcomm, Here's Locations: Meta
Why the stock market is suddenly freaking out
  + stars: | 2024-08-01 | by ( David Goldman | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +2 min
CNN —The narrative on Wall Street is shifting. Rate cuts tend to juice stocks, because they lower borrowing costs for businesses and can help boost profits. Powell warned Wednesday that cracks are starting to form in the labor market. But America’s economy remains undeniably strong. And Wall Street seems unfazed by Vice President Kamala Harris’ surprise frontrunner status for the Democratic presidential nomination.
Persons: Jerome Powell, Powell, It’s, Kamala Harris ’ Organizations: CNN, Federal Reserve, Dow, Nasdaq, Democratic Locations: America
Customers browse the S1 Pro electric scooter of Ola Electric Mobility Pvt. SoftBank -backed Ola Electric is set to raise nearly three quarters of a billion dollars with a stock market listing. India and four European nations — Iceland, Liechtenstein, Norway and Switzerland — struck a free trade agreement (FTA) earlier this year. "Our Free Trade Agreement negotiations is the floor not the ceiling of our ambitions to unlock our shared potential and deliver growth, from Bengaluru to Birmingham," Lammy said last week before his visit. India and the U.K. also have high rankings on the World Bank's Trade Complementarity Index, which indicates whether countries are natural trade partners.
Persons: Ola, Samyukta Lakshmi, Bharat, Switzerland —, David Lammy, Lammy, Chietigj Bajpaee, Narendra Modi's, Aastha Gudwani, Murugesh Organizations: Ola Electric Mobility, Ola Experience, Ola, Bloomberg, Getty, Mankind, Vaccines, South, House, India, Indian, Bank of America's, NYSE Locations: Bengaluru, India, Iceland, Liechtenstein, Norway, Switzerland, New Delhi, Birmingham, South Asia, Bank of America's India, Singapore, Japan
CNBC's Jim Cramer examined Thursday's market action, attributing the day's brutal sell-off to the Federal Reserve's decision to hold rates steady instead of making a cut. "To me, today's terrible action in stocks was a function of the Fed not cutting rates yesterday," he said. Although Fed Chair Jerome Powell indicated a rate cut was "on the table" in September, many on Wall Street feared that would be too late. The "soft economy" is new, he added, saying last year at this time Wall Street criticized the Fed for being unable to tame inflation. "I have better things to do with my time than lambaste a Fed chief for conceivably letting the economy wither for seven more weeks," Cramer said.
Persons: CNBC's Jim Cramer, they've, Jerome Powell, Russell, Cramer, lambaste, Powell Organizations: Federal, Wall, Investors, Dow Jones, Nasdaq, Treasury, Fed
The U.K. stock market is likely to rise over the course of 12 months, if the Bank of England cuts interest rates on Thursday and history repeats itself, according to a CNBC Pro analysis. Economists say the forecasts for whether the U.K. central bank will either reduce or hold rates are a close call. A decision to lower interest rates — which sit at at 5.25% currently — would mark the first time monetary police has been eased in Britain since the hiking cycle began in December 2021. The analysis found that, on three occasions the index had risen more than 20% on average within a year after an interest rate cut. For instance, the domestically focused index of 250 stocks rose by 17% across three months after the Bank of England cut rates in 1998.
Persons: Agne Stengeryte, BoE, Nora Szentivanyi Organizations: Bank of England, CNBC, CNBC Pro, Bank of, Bank, America's, Barclays Locations: Britain, Bank of England
US stocks nosedived on Thursday after several discouraging economic data points. The ISM manufacturing index dropped from 48.5% in June to 46.8% in July, marking an eight-month low. Investors are pricing in a 100% chance of Fed rate cuts in September, according to the CME FedWatch tool. Meanwhile, new data shows ISM manufacturing slid further into contraction territory in July. Jensen Huang just got $12 billion richer in a single day as Nvidia's stock soared on Wednesday.
Persons: , Jerome Powell, Jensen Huang Organizations: Service, Reuters
There was a perverse view this year that bad economic news was actually good news for the stock market, as the heat coming off the economy would give the Federal Reserve the greenlight to cut interest rates. This made some sense with inflation for the first time in a while becoming the primary market bogeyman over a slowing economy. Announced layoffs last month were the highest for any July in more than two decades, outplacement firm Challenger, Gray & Christmas reported. Investors got what they thought they wanted, with the 10-year Treasury yield breaking below 4% for the first time since February. Even tech stocks found themselves in the red as they too, may be hurt more by a slowing economy, than their valuations are boosted by lower rates.
Persons: Jerome Powell, Chris Rupkey, Adam Crisafulli, Dow Jones, Yun Li, Jeff Cox Organizations: Federal Reserve, Institute for Supply Management, Investors, Dow Jones, Dow, JPMorgan Chase, Caterpillar, Vital Knowledge Locations: U.S
Over the past couple of weeks, energy stocks have outperformed as investors have moved away from technology, consumer discretionary and, well, everything else. I'll breaking down my market view and then describe a possible trade on a big energy stock into earnings. Several energy companies, including the three largest US-based integrated oil companies, report earnings this week. Exxon is up slightly this week as oil inches higher on Middle East tensions. XOM YTD mountain Exxon, year-to-date Crude prices and energy stocks are, technically, mixed bags.
Persons: I've, Brent, that's Organizations: Exxon Mobil, Chevron, Exxon, CNBC, NBC UNIVERSAL
Cash has poured into money market funds since the Federal Reserve began its rate hiking cycle. Short-term debt has been a popular investment over the past few years, and money market funds are a top example. For perspective, there was roughly $4 trillion in total money market funds as of the fourth quarter of 2019, according to the St. Louis Fed . Money market funds hold very short-term debt, and many currently offer a yield above 5%. "Historically, you don't tend to see money market inflows stop or convert to outflows until you get below say 3% on those rates.
Persons: Cash, Louis Fed, Sam Huszczo, Huszczo, Todd Sohn, Ken Brodkowitz, weren't, Brodkowitz, Strategas, Sohn, " Sohn, Callie Cox, Cox Organizations: Federal Reserve, Investment Company Institute, SGH Wealth Management, Federal, Bond, SEC, Gries Financial Partners, Fidelity, Income, Morningstar, US Treasury, Ritholtz Wealth Management, Ritholtz Locations: Detroit , Michigan, BlackRock
The rally would be sparked by a dovish Fed FOMC meeting on Wednesday that all but confirms imminent interest rate cuts. "These are significant gains, implying the S&P 500 could gain 200-300 points in the next week," Lee said. "The key premise is the Fed is likely to commit to a September rate cut of at least 25bp. Lee's confidence in a strong rally post-Fed meeting is based on the fact that recent Fed meetings have sparked a big rally in stocks. "Here are some tangible reasons a Fed cut makes sense: 30-year mortgage has excess spread to 10-year due to uncertainty.
Persons: Tom Lee, Lee, Organizations: Service, Fed, Nasdaq
While we are getting a tech rally Wednesday thanks to Advanced Micro Devices (up 7%), this is the month when rotation became more than a one day event. Since small-cap companies often have more debt and higher borrowing costs, the expectation of lower rates is certainly a factor. I noted weeks ago that more fundamentally inclined investors were worried about the slower rate of earnings growth for big cap technology stocks . The Russell 2000 would also benefit any time a rotation out of tech occurs because the weightings are different. While the two sectors that comprise technology in the S & P 500 (Technology and Communication Services) are about 40% of the S & P 500, the Russell 2000 is much more diverse.
Persons: Consumer Staples, Russell Organizations: Micro Devices, Energy, Health Care, Consumer, Communication Services, Care Locations: Banks
When it comes to investing in sectors such as financials and energy under Trump, Bianco believes that size matters. A Harris presidency would benefit the renewable energy industry, according to Amanda Rebello, head of Xtrackers ETF sales at DWS. That's primarily because a Harris presidency would result in more stringent fiscal policy than a Trump one. The national debt is also likely to rise faster under a Trump presidency compared to a Harris one. AdvertisementInvestors can prepare for a Harris presidency by adding fixed income assets such as US 10-year Treasury notes to their portfolios.
Persons: , David Bianco, Harris, it's, He's, Bianco, Trump, Russell, REITs There's, Amanda Rebello, That's, he's, REITs, iShares Cohen Organizations: Service, Trump, Business, Republican, DWS Group, Republican National Convention, Big Pharma, VanEck Pharmaceutical, Vanguard, Energy, Democratic, Fed, Harris, Real, Investment, Battery Tech, Clean Energy, Schwab, Steers, ETF Locations: Big, Harris ' California
A China Securities Regulatory Commission sign is seen at the regulator's headquarters on November 16, 2020 in Beijing. China's securities regulator on Tuesday promoted its head of law enforcement to the role of vice chairman, underscoring Beijing's determination to tighten oversight of its $5.1 trillion stock market. Li Ming, chief of the enforcement bureau of the China Securities Regulatory Commission, will replace vice chairman Fang Xinghai, the CSRC said in a statement, citing a decision by China's State Council, or cabinet. The CSRC has pledged to regulate the market with "teeth and thorns" under chairman Wu Qing. Prior to the promotion, Li headed the enforcement bureau, which is responsible for probing illegal securities activities, handing criminal cases to the relevant authorities and facilitating cross-border investigations.
Persons: underscoring, Li Ming, Fang Xinghai, Fang, Xi Jinping, CSRC, Wu Qing, Li Organizations: China Securities Regulatory, China Securities Regulatory Commission, China's State Council, Reuters Locations: China, Beijing, Europe, United States
Certain areas of the stock market that benefit from lower rates could see a boost. AdvertisementInstead, plug some money into longer-duration bonds to lock in higher returns while they're still around, Milan said. In addition to tying down solid returns, longer-duration bonds could also appreciate when rates fall, he said. AdvertisementLook at rate-sensitive areas of the stock marketCertain areas of the stock market should also benefit from Fed rate cuts. But investors should keep their eye on the labor market the more the Fed cuts rates, Young Thomas said.
Persons: , Daniel Milan, they're, Ed Mahaffy, Mahaffy, Robert Phipps, Bernstein, Liz Young Thomas, Shmuel Shayowitz, Kristy Kim, Young Thomas Organizations: Service, Federal Reserve, Business, Cornerstone Financial Services, Treasury, ClientFirst Wealth Management, Corporate, Per Stirling Capital Management, Bloomberg, Bond, Index, Fed, Vanguard, ®, Schwab, Fidelity Locations: Michigan, Milan, TreasuryDirect, TomoCredit
US stocks surged as chipmakers lifted tech shares ahead of the Federal Reserve's rate decision. Fed Chair Powell's guidance will be crucial, with market sentiment hinging on his remarks. All eyes will be on Fed Chair Powell, who is expected to issue guidance on rate cuts in prepared remarks. Advertisement"Tonight's press conference from Fed Chair Jerome Powell may provide a catalyst for the next move. "A too-strong signal of a coming September rate cut may scare traders into thinking that the Fed sees abrupt economic weakness ahead.
Persons: , Morgan Stanley, Powell, Jerome Powell, David Morrison, Thierry Wizman Organizations: Service, Nvidia, AMD, Federal Reserve, Fed, Trade Nation, Macquarie
"A big tech stock reckoning and correction is inevitable," the chief investment officer told CNBC's " Street Signs Asia " on Tuesday. Calling the euphoria around Big Tech stocks this year "absurd," he said that such excessive investor sentiment and "overdone" momentum "always ends the same." "The biggest risk for the stock market right now is excessive valuations. Such sectors include health care, consumer staples, utilities, and the midstream part of the energy sector, according to him. "The consumers staples sector is being overlooked right now in the market as investors chase returns in the tech sector," he added.
Persons: David Bahnsen, CNBC's, Bahnsen, Mills Organizations: Big Tech, Electric, Gilead Sciences, Mills . American Electric Power, Food Locations: United States, Biopharmaceutical, Gilead
Trump is sparking steep losses in areas of the market he's targeted, a group of researchers said. Researchers pointed to Trump's many "tantrums" against certain companies and sectors, which sparked sell-offs. AdvertisementThe market is in the midst of another "Trump Dump," a phenomenon where stocks see deep losses when the presidential hopeful targets them, according a group of researchers. Advertisement"As bad as turbulence has been, a second Trump term promises to be even more perilous for the stock market," they added, pointing to the potential consequences of Trump's economic policies. Other economists have criticized Trump's economic agenda.
Persons: Trump, , Jeffrey Sonnenfeld, Whitney Tilson, Steven Tian —, Davidson, Powell, Donald Trump, Harris, Joseph Stiglitz Organizations: Service, Bloomberg, Taiwan Semiconductor, Nasdaq, Clean Energy, Harley, Delta Airlines, Biden, Trump Locations: Taiwan, Trump's
Dividend stocks are set to surge as investors deploy $6 trillion from money-market funds, Bank of America says. Investors could be looking to invest their cash as the Fed gets ready to cut interest rates in September. AdvertisementSome of the highest-yielding S&P 500 companies include Walgreens Boot Alliance, Altria, Verizon, Ford, and AT&T. And while the S&P 500 as a whole offers a dividend yield of about 1.25%, there are nearly 300 S&P 500 stocks that offer a higher yield. AdvertisementSome of the high-paying dividend stocks recommended by Belski include Abbvie, Chevron, Duke Energy, Gilead Sciences, and Pfizer.
Persons: , Savita Subramanian, Subramanian, BMO's Brian Belski, Belski Organizations: Bank of America, Fed, BMO, Gilead Sciences, Service, Treasury, Walgreens Boot Alliance, Altria, Verizon, Ford, Belski, Duke Energy, Pfizer Locations: Chevron, Gilead, Abbvie
CNBC Daily Open brings investors up to speed on everything they need to know, no matter where they are. Nvidia pulled back 7% and Microsoft fell 0.9% during the normal session before reporting earnings after the bell. Still, Microsoft beat estimates as quarterly revenue increased 15% from a year ago to $64.73 billion and net income rose to $22.04 billion. Starbucks missStarbucks' quarterly revenue slid 1% to $9.11 billion, missing forecasts as same-store sales declined for the second straight quarter. The South Korean tech giant said sales of high-end memory chips used in servers will continue to be strong.
Organizations: CNBC, New York Stock Exchange, New York City . Bank of Japan, U.S . Federal, Bank of, Nasdaq, megacaps Meta, Apple, Dow Jones, Nvidia, Microsoft, Fed, Microsoft Microsoft, Bank of Japan, Nikkei, Seng, Samsung, Samsung Electronics, Revenue, South, Reading, Fed Stock, Federal Reserve Locations: New York City, Bank of Japan, U.S, China, Shanghai
Total: 25