The Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA) continues to lean into the bullish on Wednesday, climbing around 100 points and inching towards 44,200 as equities tilt into the buy button. There aren’t any particular reasons for a fresh bull run to kick off, but investors aren’t finding any particular reason for a turn into the bearish side, either.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA) absorbed newly-minted President Donald Trump’s last-minute pivot away from enacting sweeping tariffs on his first day in office with jubilation. The major equity index climbed over 400 points and is now testing the 44,000 handle for the first time since mid-December.
U.S. stocks were rising across the board on Wednesday morning, buoyed by the advance in megacap technology names. Under the surface, however, there is furious paddling. The Dow Jones Industrial Average was struggling to hold on to its slight gains,
The Dow Jones rallied on the stock market today amid moves by President Donald Trump. Cathie Wood snapped up a rebounding AI stock.
Futures on the Dow Jones Industrial Average rose in electronic trade and the U.S. dollar slumped Monday after a report that President-elect Donald Trump won’t impose new tariffs during his first day of office.
Netflix, Oracle and other tech stocks lifted U.S. indexes as their profits pile higher and excitement builds around AI's moneymaking prospects.
Live updates on stocks, bonds and markets, including the Dow Jones Industrial Average, S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite.
It has been an astounding run from the depths of the pandemic last spring when the blue chip index bottomed out just above 18,000.
This includes the ageless Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJINDICES: ^DJI), which reached a record-closing high of more than 45,000 on Dec. 4. Since its inception in May 1896, the Dow Jones has served as a barometer of Wall Street's health. Over the last 128 ...
Investors are appraising the likely impact of Trump's orders on stocks on the first trading day after the inauguration.
U.S. stocks rose after more companies said they made bigger profits at the end of last year than analysts expected and as Treasury yields eased.