US stocks struggled gained steam on Thursday afternoon as investors digested megacap tech earnings and waited for Apple (AAPL) results for more clues on prospects for Big Tech. After the Federal Reserve stood pat on interest rates as expected,
Fed rate decision, stock market updates: Dow, Nasdaq, S&P 500 slip, Nvidia falls as Fed leaves rates unchanged Tech stocks led markets lower on Wednesday as the broader mood stayed muted after the Federal Reserve's latest interest rate decision saw the central bank keep rates unchanged in a range of 4.25%-4.5%.
As part of an agreement with Amazon, UPS said it said would cut the volume of Amazon deliveries it transports by more than 50% by the second half of 2026. UPS also said Thursday it expects revenue of "approximately $89 billion" in 2025, below Wall Street's consensus forecasts of $94.9 billion.
Investors react to the Federal Reserve's policy decision and Chairman Jerome Powell's press conference, as well as results from Meta, Microsoft and Tesla.
In this piece, we will look at the stocks Jim Cramer discussed after the DeepSeek AI selloff.
Wall Street's major averages notice limited moves on Thursday, as the Q4 GDP growth came in weaker than expected, while investors digested the tech earnings.  Early on and the S&P 500 (SP500) was +0.1%,
Nasdaq 100 dips as Powell’s Fed decision, Nvidia’s AI battle, and key earnings from Microsoft, Tesla, and Meta set the market tone. Volatility ahead!
Fed chief Jerome Powell refused to be drawn into talking about President Trump during his press conference. "I am not going to have any response or comment on what the president said," Powell said. "It's not appropriate for me to do so.
The U.S. stock market’s so-called fear gauge was rising Wednesday as investors await the outcome of the Federal Reserve’s policy meeting. The CBOE Volatility Index, which trades under the ticker VIX,
U.S. stocks are paring their earlier losses as Fed Chair Jerome Powell kicks off Wednesday's press conference with his prepared remarks. Both the Dow and S&P 500 bounced off of session lows, and the Nasdaq also climbed.
Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell told reporters that bank reserves appear to remain abundant, leaving room for the central bank to continue shrinking its balance sheet, a process widely known as quantitative tightening,
Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell on Wednesday said asset prices appear "elevated by many metrics right now," driven in part by "this thing around tech and AI." In his news conference following the Fed's policy decision,