The S&P 500 has broken the top of the trading range at 2100; is the all time high at 2135 next?
To subscribe to JAM you need to fill in some details below including, ahem, some info on how you'll pay us. A subscription is $199 (although if you're subscribing with one of our special offers it will be lower) for a year for ongoing and continuing access to the...Saturday Night Quarterback says, For the week ahead expect…
To subscribe to JAM you need to fill in some details below including, ahem, some info on how you'll pay us. A subscription is $199 (although if you're subscribing with one of our special offers it will be lower) for a year for ongoing and continuing access to the...New homes sales strong enough for a new try at 1900
U.S. stocks inched higher today continuing a recent pattern of drifting upwards without a big show of enthusiasm. The catalyst today was good news—solidly good news—on sales of new homes in April. The annualized rate jumped to 433,000, up 6.4% from March
Saturday Night Quarterback says, For the week ahead expect…
To subscribe to JAM you need to fill in some details below including, ahem, some info on how you'll pay us. A subscription is $199 (although if you're subscribing with one of our special offers it will be lower) for a year for ongoing and continuing access to the...S&P makes another run at a new all-time high–watch 1851 at the close
To subscribe to JAM you need to fill in some details below including, ahem, some info on how you'll pay us. A subscription is $199 (although if you're subscribing with one of our special offers it will be lower) for a year for ongoing and continuing access to the...If enough stocks fall on good earnings, it’s a sign of profit-taking ahead
To subscribe to JAM you need to fill in some details below including, ahem, some info on how you'll pay us. A subscription is $199 (although if you're subscribing with one of our special offers it will be lower) for a year for ongoing and continuing access to the...Reminder today: This is the Fed’s stock market
All it took to create today’s 1.4% gain was a speech by Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke saying that the Fed will keep its current “highly accommodative monetary policy for the foreseeable future.” Unemployment is still too high Bernanke noted and inflation too low. “Both sides of our mandate are saying we need to be more accommodative.”