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In the end, all three major indexes notched healthy gains in 2016. The Dow was up 13.4%; the S&P gained 9.5%; and the Nasdaq was up 7.5%. That's not bad considering both the Dow and S&P 500 ...
But here's the really good news: If you put your money in stocks in 2014, you were a savvy investor. The Dow finished the year up 7.5%, the S&P 500 rose 11.4%, and the tech-heavy Nasdaq soared 13.4%.
Buyers charged back in and limited the damage, but at the closing bell the Dow was still down 1,175 points, by far its worst closing point decline on record. The drop amounted to 4.6% -- the ...
U.S. stocks closed lower on Friday, but Wall Street finished off one of its best years in a long time. The Dow raced 25% higher in 2017, getting even closer to 25,000 and making this year its best ...
By CNNMoney. Most stock quote data provided by BATS. Market indices are shown in real time, except for the DJIA, which is delayed by two minutes.
The Close | Today's top market-moving news. Stocks end mixed on lackluster economic reports. U.S. stocks drifted lower but rebounded in later trading Thursday to end at nearly breakeven ...
Jan. 4: Stocks start the year on a positive note, closing at 15-month highs. The Dow Jones industrial average ( INDU ) starts at 10,584; the S&P 500 ( SPX ) at 1,133; and the tech-heavy Nasdaq ...
Fear took over the American stock market in January -- and the results weren't pretty at all. Even though the Dow surged 397 points on Friday, it still lost 5.5% of its value in January.
The Dow Jones industrial average and the S&P 500 also appear set to close lower, marking the first time in a decade that all three major indexes would finish the year in negative territory.
February was easily one of Wall Street's wildest months since 2008. The Dow plummeted more than 3,200 points, or 12%, in just two weeks. Then stocks raced back to life, at one point recovering ...