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Here's where US indexes stood at the 4:00 p.m. closing bell on Tuesday: S&P 500 : 5,909.03, down 1.11% Dow Jones Industrial Average : 42,528.36, down 0.42% (-178.20 points)
Stocks sold off after hours before recovering early Tuesday. The S&P 500 and Nasdaq rose 0.57% and 0.63%, respectively, while the Dow Jones increased by over 100 points. The 10-year Treasury yield ...
Bank of America said in a note out Monday that more downside in equities is likely — at least according to history. The S&P 500 year-to-date-correction from early to late January was 9.8% on a ...
Closing Bell can refer to two CNBC programs: the original Closing Bell on CNBC (which debuted on February 4, 2002) and European Closing Bell on CNBC Europe (which was cancelled on December 18, 2015). The show is named after the bell that is rung to signify the end of a trading session on the New York Stock Exchange which occurs at 4:00 pm EST.
As the major European markets are electronic, no actual "closing bell" was rung – nonetheless there was a countdown on the CNBC Europe strap and video wall until the close of trade. Other regular segments included a daily "Guest Investor" and a technical analysis slot. Prior to 26 March 2007, the programme ran for two hours until 7pm CET.
A loss of just over 24 percent on May 5, 1893, from 39.90 to 30.02 signaled the apex of the stock effects of the Panic of 1893; the 2007–2008 crash was a 61.8 percent retracement thereof that began on October 11, 2007, and lasted until the closing low on March 9, 2009. [7]
The Dow jumped 700 points and the Nasdaq gained more than 2% as investors cheered encouraging inflation data and a strong start to earnings season.
U.S. stocks rallied on Friday, rounding out a big end to the week, while bond yields retreated slightly from their recent march. At the close, the S&P 500 surged 1.6%, while the Dow Jones ...