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However, the apparent decline was due to a later 1916 revision of the Dow Jones Industrial Average, which retroactively adjusted the values following the closure but not those before, and it represents the only discontinuity in the index's history rather than an actual loss. [3] [4]
Among major market indexes, the Dow Jones Industrial Average closed down 122.75 points Monday, a decline of 0.28% for the day, after falling as much as 309.09 points earlier.
The Trump tariffs are here ... Dow Jones Industrial Average futures were down more than 500 points. ... investment falls, and employment declines. Federal receipts should increase, all else equal ...
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 ...
On 27 February, due to mounting worries about the COVID-19 pandemic, stock markets in Asia-Pacific and Europe saw 3–5% declines, [92] [93] with the NASDAQ-100, the S&P 500, and the Dow Jones Industrial Average posting their sharpest falls since 2008 (and the Dow falling 1,191 points, its largest one-day drop since the financial crisis of 2007 ...
The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 0.8%. Trump will put in place 25% tariffs on imports from Canada and Mexico and 10% tariffs on goods from China effective Saturday.
Trump delays Mexican tariffs a month for soliders at border. ... the blue-chip Dow dipped 0.28%, or 122.75 points, to 44,421.91; and the tech-heavy Nasdaq shed 1.2%, or 235.49 points, to 19,391.96 ...
The tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite led the decline, ending the day down by 1.6%; while the S&P 500 and Dow both fell about 1%. For the Dow, this translated to a drop of just over 400 points.