Stock Market Today: Nasdaq Surges on Nvidia Earnings
Digest more
Stocks surged in the US on Thursday, as earnings from NVIDIA Corp. and solid economic data eased concerns about an impending economic slowdown. The S&P 500
U.S. stock futures rose on Thursday after Wednesday’s advances. Futures of major benchmark indices were higher. Investors await September’s job report, which is scheduled to be released today after the end of the record-long government shutdown last week.
24/7 Wall St. on MSN
Stock Market Live November 20: S&P 500 (VOO) Surges on Strong Jobs, Nvidia Reports
This article will be updated throughout the day, so check back often for more daily updates. Everything that could go right to drive the stock market higher today, appears to be going right, and the Vanguard S&P 500 ETF (NYSEMKT: VOO) is up 1.
1don MSN
How did the stock market close today? Top Stock movers: GE Vernova, Block, DoorDash, and Plug Power
While intraday trading was a mix for the major indices, the stock market closed on a positive note. The S&P 500 was up 0.4% at the close, buoyed by Block and energy stock GE Vernova.The tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite fared well on the much-anticipated Nvidia earnings,
Nasdaq 100 losses near 2% on the day as US government reopens is driving the market mood today as stocks drop fast. The Nasdaq falls 1.75% to 22,997.79. The S&P 500 slips 1.09% to 6,776.03. The Dow drops 0.
The Indian stock market closed positively on Thursday, with the Sensex up 446 points and Nifty 50 near 26,200. Positive global indicators and technology stock rallies boosted investor confidence, while market analysts suggest tracking foreign fund flows and macroeconomic data for future trends.
Alarm bells are ringing for analysts who study chart patterns in the US stock market, fueling concern that the latest dip could swell into a full-blown correction of at least 10%.
US stock market crash deepened Thursday as AI overhype fears collided with bleak jobs data. Dow Jones fell 0.8%, S&P 500 dropped 0.9%, and Nasdaq tumbled 1.6%. Challenger data showed 153,074 layoffs in October — the worst since 2003.