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The Dow Jones Industrial Average closed lower by 267 points on Tuesday, or 0.6%, down for its ninth-straight day. The blue chips haven’t closed in the red for nine consecutive days since ...
Meanwhile, the US Dow Jones closed down 2.6 percent on Monday, sliding more than 1,000 points overall. The Nasdaq was down 3.4 percent, losing 576 points by the closing bell.
All the major market averages finished higher for the week, with the S&P 500 gaining 2.5%, the Dow Jones Industrial average ending up 1.8% and the Nasdaq climbing north of 4%.
The first four tables show only the largest one-day changes between a given day's close and the close of the previous trading day, [1] [2] not the largest changes during the trading day (i.e. intraday changes).
The Dow closed at 9,997.62 on Thursday, March 18, 1999. [18] It would take nearly two weeks to close above 10,000 on Monday, March 29, 1999. 14 This was the Dow's close at the peak on January 14, 2000, before the dot-com crash. 15 This was the Dow's close at the peak on October 9, 2007, before the financial crisis of 2007–2008.
On Friday, 20 March 2020, Asia-Pacific and European stock markets closed mostly up, [375] [376] while the Dow Jones Industrial Average, the NASDAQ Composite, and the S&P 500 all closed down 4% (with the Dow eclipsing its one-week decline from 24 to 28 February 2020 to finish at its largest one-week decline since the financial crisis of 2007 ...
The Dow has fallen by around 1,000 points over the last three days alone — and the negative momentum didn’t let up Thursday. The Dow closed 331 points lower, or 0.9%.
US stocks cratered on Wednesday, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average falling more than 1,100 points amid its longest losing streak in 50 years after the Federal Reserve delivered an expected ...