Last week stocks showed mixed results as political headlines continued to dominate the news. The Dow lost 0.89% and the S&P 500 was almost flat with a 0.02%
As last week ended, tension between the U.S. and some of its greatest allies was on the rise. Trade remained a hot-button topic ahead of the G-7 meeting in
Markets experienced heightened volatility this week, with the S&P 500 rising 0.49% and Dow dropping 0.48%. Meanwhile, the NASDAQ rose 1.62%, as international
Geopolitical uncertainty affected stocks last week, as the historic summit between the U.S. and North Korea began to look less likely. On Thursday, May 24
Major domestic indexes went down last week after all three gained more than 2% the previous week.[1] The S&P 500 dropped 0.54%, the Dow gave back 0.47%, and the
On Friday, the markets closed the week gaining traction. The Dow had 7 days of consecutive growth, rising 2.34% - its largest weekly gain since March. [1
Domestic indexes posted strong results on Friday, May 4, as the latest labor report data lessened investors' concerns abou t inflation and interest rates
We just finished the busiest week of 1 st quarter earnings season, and although many companies shared positive results, stock indexes experienced modest
Stocks posted moderate gains last week, as the S&P 500 added 0.52%, the Dow increased 0.42%, and the NASDAQ rose 0.56%.[1] International stocks in the MSCI EAFE
Market volatility continues. Stocks slid on Friday, April 13, but still held on to gains for the week. [1] The S&P 500 increased 1.99%, the Dow added 1.79%, and
Domestic stocks lost ground last week as trade war concerns continued to rattle investors. With these declines, the Dow officially moved back into correction
Markets were closed on March 30 for Good Friday, but in the four days of trading, stocks recovered some of this year's losses. [1] For the week, the S&P 500