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Stay ahead in the financial world with "Stock Market News and Info Tracker," your go-to podcast for the latest updates, insights, and analysis on the stock market. Whether you're a seasoned investor or new to trading, our daily episodes provide you with essential news, market trends, and expert opinions to help you make informed investment decisions. Join us as we explore the dynamic world of stocks, financial markets, and economic indicators. Subscribe now to "Stock Market News and Info Tracker" and never miss an episode – your trusted source for stock market intelligence.
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Listeners, today's US stock market showed a mixed performance amid geopolitical tensions and elevated oil prices. The S&P 500 fell to six thousand six hundred fifty-eight, down fourteen points or about zero point two percent, according to Economic Times reports. The Nasdaq Composite dropped sharply to twenty-two thousand two hundred eleven, losing one hundred points or roughly zero point five percent, while the Dow Jones Industrial Average held steady near forty-six thousand seven hundred two, as noted by TipRanks and Economic Times. Key drivers included rising volatility with the VIX at twenty-six point four nine, signaling caution, and oil prices near ninety-five US dollars per barrel for West Texas Intermediate crude, fueled by Strait of Hormuz concerns, prompting rotation from tech to defensive stocks.Technology lagged as a top decliner, with profit-taking in growth names, while energy and defensives like industrials gained ground. Most actively traded included NVIDIA around one hundred eighty-two US dollars, Intel up one point seven percent, and Tesla near three hundred ninety-five US dollars. Biggest gainers featured MARA Holdings surging over twelve percent on crypto momentum, and NIO up four percent; losers saw biotech Immutep plunge over eighty percent.No major economic data dominated, but fourth quarter two thousand twenty-five growth slowdown lingered in focus per twenty-four seven Wall Street. Pre-market futures pointed higher, with S&P five hundred up zero point four five percent, Nasdaq up zero point four three percent, and Dow up zero point four one percent, as per TheStreet.Tomorrow, watch Micron Technology earnings after close, plus Lululemon Athletica and others next week, per Morningstar analysis. Geopolitical updates and oil moves remain catalysts.Thank you listeners for tuning in, and please subscribe. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.For great deals check out https://amzn.to/403yeYoThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Listeners, United States stock markets closed sharply lower today amid escalating geopolitical tensions in the Middle East driving oil prices higher. According to 247wallst.com, the S and P five hundred fell zero point eight percent or fifty-four points, while the Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped one percent or four hundred seventy-four points, and the Nasdaq declined zero point seven seven percent or one hundred ninety-two points.[1] The Economic Times reports even steeper losses later in the session, with the Dow at forty-six thousand eight hundred sixteen point nine nine, down six hundred twenty-eight points or one point two seven percent, and the S and P five hundred at six thousand six hundred ninety-three point two one, down eighty-three points.[4] Skyrocketing oil at ninety-three dollars and sixty-two cents per barrel, fueled by threats to the Strait of Hormuz and warnings of two hundred dollar oil from Iranian officials, hammered sentiment, as noted by 247wallst.com.[1]Energy stocks led gains on the rally, with JPMorgan recommending longs like the SPDR Energy Select Sector ETF, while cybersecurity names such as CrowdStrike, Palo Alto Networks, and Fortinet rose on reports of pro-Iranian hacks, per 247wallst.com.[1] Wells Fargo double-upgraded Occidental Petroleum to overweight with a sixty-nine dollar target.[1]Most active trading focused on oil-linked names, with cybersecurity gainers standing out amid attack alerts. No major economic data releases today, but Iran war fears dominated headlines.Pre-market futures point lower, with S and P five hundred futures down zero point five zero percent, Dow futures off zero point five nine percent, and Nasdaq one hundred futures down zero point four nine percent, according to TipRanks and daytraders.com.[2][3] Watch for Navy updates on Hormuz escorts and potential two hundred dollar oil scenarios tomorrow.Thanks for tuning in, listeners—please subscribe for more. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.For great deals check out https://amzn.to/403yeYoThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Listeners, the US stock market saw mixed performance today with major indices closing lower amid profit booking and caution ahead of key inflation data. According to S and P Dow Jones Indices, the S and P five hundred three percent capped index fell zero point three one percent, while the Dow Jones United States large cap total stock market total return index gained zero point eight five percent. The NASDAQ faced pressure, contributing to broader market jitters as the volatility index spiked above thirty five for the first time since April twenty twenty five, per a Chart Day analysis on YouTube. Key drivers included nervousness over persistent inflation, with the Federal Reserve potentially holding or raising rates, and the fear and greed index hovering in extreme fear around twenty five.S and P five hundred ex financials and real estate indices dipped zero point one six percent, highlighting uneven sector moves, though specific top gainers and decliners were not detailed in reports. Actively traded stocks and big percentage movers lacked precise data today, but Visa traded around three hundred thirteen dollars pre market after parabolic gains, and Texas Roadhouse outperformed the S and P five hundred over five years with seventy one percent returns.Economic releases featured MBA mortgage market index data, but markets eyed evening core inflation figures. Pre market futures pointed higher, signaling potential rebound, as noted in a Pre Market Report on YouTube. Watch tomorrow's core PCE price index, durable goods orders, GDP second estimate, and personal spending at twelve thirty PM Eastern time, per Trading Economics calendar, which could sway direction amid inflation worries.Thank you listeners for tuning in, and please subscribe for more updates. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.For great deals check out https://amzn.to/403yeYoThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Listeners, US stock markets faced sharp declines today amid escalating war in Iran, driving fears of higher inflation and oil prices. According to TheStreet, the Russell two thousand was down one point four zero percent, Dow Jones fell one point one nine percent, S and P five hundred dropped zero point nine four percent, and Nasdaq declined zero point eight five percent.[4] Morningstar reports that the conflict is pressuring markets, with potential impacts on the Federal Reserve's interest rate decisions and boosting interest in oil and defense stocks.[1][5] Capital Street FX notes all major indices are negative year-to-date for two thousand twenty-six, with Dow down three percent, S and P five hundred down two percent, and Nasdaq down one point two percent following last week's selloff.[2]Key factors include Brent crude surging eighteen percent, as Moneycontrol highlights, sparking global risk-off moves with markets sliding two to eight percent.[8] Sectors saw small caps like Russell two thousand leading losses, while energy and defense may gain from geopolitical tensions per Morningstar.[1]Market highlights feature earnings from Okta, Marvell Technology, and Broadcom, with Morningstar upgrading Crowdstrike and debating Broadcom as a buy.[1][5] No specific biggest gainers or losers detailed, but rotation from tech continues.Pre-market futures point lower, echoing S and P micro Emini trades showing volatility.[3] Watch tomorrow for prolonged war effects on inflation, Fed moves, and private credit concerns.[1] Upcoming earnings and oil developments remain key catalysts.Thank you listeners for tuning in, and please subscribe. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.For great deals check out https://amzn.to/403yeYoThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Listeners, the US stock market closed sharply lower today amid escalating geopolitical tensions and disappointing economic data. The S and P five hundred fell one point five seven percent or one hundred seven points, with the S P D R S and P five hundred exchange traded fund down one point five five percent or ten dollars and fifty-four cents, according to two four seven wall street dot com[3]. The Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped one point nine percent or nine hundred eleven points[3]. The NASDAQ declined one point five eight percent or three hundred sixty points[3]. Key drivers included spiking oil prices nearing ninety dollars per barrel due to the Iran conflict blocking the Strait of Hormuz, up thirty-five percent for the week, as reported by Nasdaq dot com[6]. A surprise February jobs report showed nonfarm payrolls down ninety-two thousand jobs against expectations of fifty thousand added, with unemployment rising to four point four percent, per the Bureau of Labor Statistics[7].Financial stocks and basic materials were the top decliners, hit hard by trade disruptions, while the tech-heavy NASDAQ held up slightly better[6]. Transportation weakened two point nine three percent[2]. Volatility Index surged to twenty-eight point four zero[3].Market highlights featured oil's rally and gold up seventeen dollars and eighty-five cents to five thousand eighty-nine dollars and seventy-three cents, with Bitcoin down two thousand one hundred thirteen dollars to sixty-eight thousand seven hundred fifty-one dollars[3]. No specific top gainers or losers were detailed amid broad sell-off.Pre-market futures point to continued caution, with My Strategic Forecast warning of a critical weekly close and potential major downside if supports break[2]. Watch tomorrow's weekly closes for S and P five hundred near six hundred seventy-nine, transports, and financials. Key events include labor report fallout and Iran war updates, with oil possibly hitting one hundred dollars or more[3].Thank you listeners for tuning in, and please subscribe. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.For great deals check out https://amzn.to/403yeYoThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Listeners, the US stock market closed higher today with the S&P 500 gaining 52.87 points, or 0.8 percent, to end at 6,869.5, according to Nasdaq.com reports. The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 238.14 points, or 0.5 percent, to 48,739.41, while the Nasdaq Composite advanced 290.79 points, or 1.3 percent, to 22,807.48, Nasdaq.com details. Tech and consumer discretionary sectors led with gains of 1.3 percent and 2.2 percent respectively, as Communication Services rose 0.6 percent, but Energy declined 0.7 percent, per the same source. Key drivers included optimism over potential de-escalation in US-Iran tensions after reports of Iran's openness to talks, plus a solid Federal Reserve Beige Book showing modest economic growth, stable employment, and resilient spending amid inflation, Nasdaq.com states. The ISM Services Index hit 56.1 for February, its highest in over three years, boosting sentiment.Standouts saw Advanced Micro Devices jump 5.8 percent and Amazon.com rise 3.9 percent in US dollars, Nasdaq.com notes. Volume returned amid a rebound from prior drops, as a French trading video on YouTube observes with S&P 500 up 0.78 percent and Nasdaq up 1.29 percent.Pre-market futures suggest caution ahead of tomorrow's nonfarm payrolls forecast at 58 thousand jobs, unemployment rate at 4.3 percent, retail sales at minus 0.3 percent, and average hourly earnings at 0.3 percent, Investing.com reports, alongside Federal Reserve speeches.Watch these for potential catalysts. Thank you for tuning in, listeners—please subscribe. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.For great deals check out https://amzn.to/403yeYoThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
The United States stock market experienced significant turbulence today as ongoing tensions in the Middle East continued to weigh on investor sentiment. According to Bloomberg Television, Asian markets bore the brunt of the selling pressure, with South Korea experiencing its biggest stock market crash ever, while United States futures are pointing decidedly negative though American stocks have shown more resilience compared to their global counterparts.Oil prices remained a central concern throughout the session. Brent crude briefly topped eighty five dollars per barrel yesterday and settled around eighty three dollars, approximately closing in on eighty four dollars per barrel. President Donald Trump pledged that the United States will ensure safe passage of oil from the Middle East to head off a potential energy crisis, though oil pared some of its gains only briefly on this news before rising again due to uncertainty around implementation details.The conflict in Iran continues to reverberate across regions and roil markets globally. Bloomberg Television reports that fading hopes for a swift end to the war have amplified concerns about spikes in oil prices and their knock-on effects on the economy. However, according to Fundstrat Capital, markets tend to bottom on bad news, and despite the geopolitical shock, the firm maintains expectations for March to be an up month for equities driven by seasonality, a Magnificent Seven valuation reset that has already occurred, and signs that the crypto winter may be ending.The technology sector showed particular weakness today with the NASDAQ futures down significantly. Energy stocks meanwhile benefited from elevated crude prices, though broader market sentiment remained cautious given supply chain risks and inflation concerns tied directly to Middle East developments.Looking ahead, listeners should monitor the Federal Reserve's March meeting and upcoming jobs data, as well as any further developments regarding the Sea of Hormuz, where markets estimate a sixty one percent probability of closure according to Fundstrat Capital analysis.Thank you for tuning in and please be sure to subscribe. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.For great deals check out https://amzn.to/403yeYoThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Listeners, the US stock market weakened today amid escalating fears of prolonged conflict with Iran, including threats to close the Strait of Hormuz, driving oil prices up sharply. According to Nasdaq reports, the S&P 500 closed down 0.95 percent at 6,817 points, the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell around 1.5 percent or 786 points as per 247 Wall Street updates, and the Nasdaq Composite dropped 1.02 percent to 22,517. Key factors included surging oil prices, with Brent crude at about 83 US dollars and West Texas Intermediate at 76 US dollars per Scotiabank's Daily Points, plus a spike in the Volatility Index to 25.40. Sectors saw energy and defense stocks like Palantir advance on geopolitical demand, while broader indices suffered, according to 247 Wall Street.Market highlights featured Plug Power as a top percentage gainer, surging 23.20 percent to 2.23 US dollars on a revenue beat and new CEO plans for profitability by 2028, with trading volume at 222.8 million shares per Nasdaq. Target rose about 6 percent on improving sales outlook as noted by 247 Wall Street, amid otherwise heavy selling. Significant news centered on Iranian threats disrupting 13 million barrels of oil daily, potentially pushing prices to 100 US dollars, and US evacuations in the region.Pre-market futures point lower, with S&P 500 futures down 1.62 percent. Watch for vehicle sales data, Fed speakers reacting to Iran per Scotiabank, and ongoing Middle East developments tomorrow. Economic sentiment slipped to 47.5 in March per Trading Economics, missing expectations.Thank you listeners for tuning in, and please subscribe for more updates. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.For great deals check out https://amzn.to/403yeYoThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Listeners, Wall Street is experiencing a downturn today, with the S&P 500 down zero point eight percent or about fifty-five United States dollars per share in the SPDR S and P five hundred exchange-traded fund, the Dow Jones Industrial Average down one point zero six percent or five hundred twenty-six points, and the Nasdaq down zero point ninety-three percent or two hundred thirty-three points, according to twenty-four seven Wall Street[4]. Yesterday's close showed the Dow up zero point zero three percent or seventeen point zero five points to forty-nine thousand four hundred ninety-nine point two zero, the S and P five hundred down zero point five percent to six thousand nine hundred eight point eight six, and the Nasdaq Composite down one point two percent or two hundred seventy-three point six nine points to twenty-two thousand eight hundred seventy-eight point three eight, as reported by Nasdaq[1]. Key drivers include hotter-than-expected producer price index data, up zero point five percent monthly with core up zero point eight percent, fueling inflation worries[4][5], alongside US-Iran tensions boosting oil to sixty-six dollars and eighty-one cents per barrel[4]. Sectors saw Information Technology down one point eight percent, Communication Services down zero point eight percent, and Consumer Discretionary down zero point four percent, while Financials rose one point three percent[1]. Standouts include Dell shares up eleven percent or thirteen dollars premarket on strong fourth-quarter revenue of thirty-three point three eight billion United States dollars and AI server growth outlook[4], Netflix up eight dollars premarket after exiting a Warner Bros Discovery deal[4], and Palantir gaining on buy ratings with targets to one hundred fifty dollars[4]. Yesterday, PENN Entertainment surged sixteen point eight percent post-earnings[1]. Volume was nineteen point five five billion shares, below average[1].Pre-market futures point lower, with Dow crossing below forty-nine thousand amid defensive stock leads[2]. Watch tomorrow for initial jobless claims around two hundred ten thousand[3], and next week February jobs report expecting plus sixty-five thousand jobs and unemployment at four point four percent, plus ISM manufacturing at fifty point five and retail sales down zero point five percent[3][9]. Key earnings continue with potential AI and tariff catalysts.Thank you listeners for tuning in, and please subscribe. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.For great deals check out https://amzn.to/403yeYoThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Listeners, Wall Street saw declines today after Nvidia's strong earnings failed to excite investors. According to Nasdaq, yesterday's close had the Dow Jones Industrial Average up 0.6 percent or 307.65 points at 49,482.15 US dollars, the S&P 500 up 0.8 percent at 6,946.13, and the Nasdaq Composite up 1.3 percent or 288.40 points at 23,152.08, driven by tech gains in information technology up 1.8 percent, financials up 1.7 percent, and communication services up 0.9 percent while industrials fell 0.8 percent[1]. But 24/7 Wall St reports today's intraday action showed the S&P 500 up fractionally at 0.12 percent, Dow up 0.21 percent or 103 points, and Nasdaq up 0.04 percent, though Nvidia dropped amid AI spending concerns despite data center revenue surging 75 percent year over year to 62.3 billion US dollars and total revenue of 68.13 billion US dollars beating estimates[2]. Another source notes the Nasdaq fell 1.9 percent, S&P 500 down 1.1 percent, and Dow down 0.4 percent by afternoon, erasing Wednesday's gains with Nvidia leading the drop[4].Standouts included Photronics up 14.7 percent and United Therapeutics up 13 percent on earnings beats per Zacks, while Owens Corning fell 2.5 percent[1]. Initial jobless claims came in at 212 thousand, slightly up but stable[7].Pre-market futures point mixed ahead of tomorrow's key releases like Producer Price Index at 0.3 percent forecast, housing starts, and durable goods orders per Investing.com[9]. Watch Broadcom earnings next week and Friday's inflation data for catalysts[2].Thanks for tuning in, listeners—please subscribe for more. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.For great deals check out https://amzn.to/403yeYoThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
US stocks closed higher today with broad market gains across all three major indices. According to Nasdaq, the S&P five hundred gained zero point eight percent to end at six thousand eight hundred ninety point zero seven. The tech heavy Nasdaq Composite advanced one point one percent, finishing at twenty two thousand eight hundred sixty three point sixty eight. The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose zero point eight percent, or three hundred seventy point forty four points, to close at forty nine thousand one hundred seventy four point fifty.Nine of the eleven broad market sectors finished in positive territory. The Consumer Discretionary sector led gains with a one point six percent rise, followed by Industrials and Utilities each climbing one point two and one point one percent respectively. Healthcare was the only significant decliner, falling zero point six percent.Tech stocks drove the day's momentum. Nvidia jumped more than two percent ahead of its quarterly earnings report expected after market close. Apple gained two percent following news of expanded manufacturing facilities in Houston for Mac mini production and AI servers. Microsoft climbed roughly two point five percent after management confirmed OpenAI remains a reliable Azure client.According to Investor's Business Daily, the market rally was boosted by positive labor market and economic reports. The fear gauge, measured by the CBOE Volatility Index, decreased seven percent to nineteen point fifty five.Notable activity included Salesforce shares rising four point one percent and DocuSign climbing two point six percent following announcements related to Anthropic's new artificial intelligence integrations for enterprise customers. Oppenheimer initiated coverage on Oracle with a one hundred eighty five dollar price target, noting the stock's multiples have fallen more than half since September.Looking ahead, listeners should watch for Nvidia's earnings results tonight and monitor any developments regarding the company's next generation Rubin architecture. Initial jobless claims data releases tomorrow will provide important signals about labor market health.Thank you for tuning in and be sure to subscribe. This has been a Quiet Please production. For more, check out Quiet Please dot A I.For great deals check out https://amzn.to/403yeYoThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Listeners, the US stock market is rebounding today after Monday's sharp decline, with the S&P 500 down just zero point zero four percent or about two points, the Dow Jones Industrial Average up zero point one three percent or sixty-one points, and the Nasdaq Composite up zero point two two percent or fifty-six points, according to 247 Wall Street[1]. Key drivers include new ten percent tariffs on global imports taking effect for one hundred fifty days, sparking initial fears, but solid economic data like ADP's strong hiring print of twelve thousand seven hundred fifty workers per week and The Conference Board Consumer Confidence Index rising two point two points to ninety-one point two are fueling a turnaround rally, as reported by Interactive Brokers[3] and The Conference Board[5]. Sectors see technology and consumer discretionary leading gains, while financials, communication services, and industrials lagged Monday with drops of three point three percent, one point four percent, and one point four percent per Zacks[2].Market highlights feature Advanced Micro Devices up over nine percent or twenty dollars in premarket on a multi-year deal with Meta for up to six gigawatts of GPUs, Home Depot up nine dollars and seventy cents after beating earnings with two dollars and seventy-two cents per share and thirty-eight point two billion dollars in revenue, and Bitcoin at sixty-three thousand sixty-seven dollars amid tariff jitters[1]. Monday's decliners included CrowdStrike down nine point nine percent on AI cybersecurity fears[2].Looking forward, premarket futures point to modest gains, Nvidia earnings this week draw bullish analyst calls from Truist and Citi, and watch the State of the Union tonight for tariff updates plus tomorrow's key economic releases[1].Thank you listeners for tuning in, and please subscribe for more. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.For great deals check out https://amzn.to/403yeYoThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
US stock markets opened sharply lower today amid escalating trade uncertainty, as President Trump hiked tariffs to 15 percent on imports following a Supreme Court ruling limiting his prior authority, prompting fears of retaliation from the European Union. Bloomberg Television reports pre-market S&P 500 futures down 0.25 to 0.3 percent, NASDAQ 100 futures down 0.4 percent, and Russell 2000 futures down 0.5 percent, with intraday drops exceeding 1 percent across major indexes by late morning according to MarketPulse. Friday's close saw the Dow Jones Industrial Average up 0.5 percent or 230.81 points to 49,625.97 United States dollars, S&P 500 up 0.7 percent to 6,909.51, and NASDAQ Composite up 0.9 percent to 22,886.07, building weekly gains of 0.25 percent, 1.08 percent, and 1.51 percent respectively per Nasdaq reports.Key drivers include tariff hikes overriding last week's court setback, slowing business activity from flash PMI surveys hit by weather and affordability woes as noted by S&P Global, and a broad selloff hitting tech like Microsoft, Amazon, and Tesla while healthcare and communications held firmer. Novo Nordisk American Depositary Receipts plunged 15 percent on demand slowdowns, per Bloomberg. Sectors saw consumer discretionary and financials lead Friday but energy declined 0.7 percent.Actively traded names like those faced pressure, with Dow breaching its 50-day moving average near 49,080 United States dollars. Economic releases showed fourth-quarter 2025 gross domestic product growth at a soft 1.4 percent annual rate due to government shutdown and consumer pullback, per Los Angeles Times and NACS citing Commerce Department data.Pre-market futures signal continued caution. Watch tomorrow's consumer confidence, wholesale trade sales, and Federal Reserve speeches, plus State of the Union address, Home Depot earnings, and Nvidia results. Federal Reserve Governor Waller eyes February jobs and inflation data ahead of March meeting.Thank you listeners for tuning in, and please subscribe. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.For great deals check out https://amzn.to/403yeYoThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
US stock markets closed lower today, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average tumbling 0.5 percent or 267.50 points to 49,395.16, according to Zacks Investment Research. The S&P 500 fell 0.2 percent to 6,861.89, while the Nasdaq Composite slid 0.3 percent to 22,682.73[1]. Key factors driving the downturn included concerns over private credit providers like Blue Owl Capital selling loan assets and halting redemptions, plus heightened geopolitical tensions between the United States and Iran, as reported by Zacks[1]. Energy and technology sectors led gainers, up 1.9 percent and 1 percent respectively, while utilities and real estate declined 1.7 percent and 1.3 percent[1].In market highlights, stocks like Blue Owl Capital, Blackstone, and Apollo Global tumbled 5.9 percent, 5.3 percent, and 5.2 percent on private credit woes[1]. Trading volume was 16.4 billion shares, below the recent average[1]. Economic data showed initial jobless claims dropping to 206,000, beating estimates, but the trade deficit widened to 70.3 billion dollars and pending home sales fell 0.8 percent[1]. The advance estimate for fourth-quarter 2025 real gross domestic product growth came in at 1.4 percent annualized, below expectations of over 3 percent, per the Bureau of Economic Analysis and Desjardins[5][6].Looking forward, pre-market futures point to caution amid oil price surges on Iran fears[4]. Watch tomorrow's S&P Global Services Purchasing Managers Index flash at 52.3 expected, consumer confidence, and Richmond Fed manufacturing index[3]. Key earnings include over 234 companies like Walmart before the open[1]. Potential catalysts are Federal Reserve speeches and ongoing geopolitical risks.Thank you listeners for tuning in, and please subscribe. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.For great deals check out https://amzn.to/403yeYoThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Wall Street closed higher yesterday, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average rising zero point three percent or one hundred twenty-nine point four seven points to forty-nine thousand six hundred sixty-two point six six, according to Zacks Investment Research. The S and P five hundred gained zero point six percent to six thousand eight hundred eighty-one point three one, while the Nasdaq Composite advanced zero point eight percent or one hundred seventy-five point two five points to twenty-two thousand seven hundred fifty-three point six four, driven by strong artificial intelligence stocks like Nvidia up one point six percent, Meta Platforms up zero point six percent, and Alphabet up zero point four percent. Key factors included regained confidence in artificial intelligence trades and solid economic data, with industrial production up zero point seven percent in January beating estimates, though durable goods orders fell one point four percent in December. Sectors saw financials and real estate up one point one percent and one percent respectively, while energy, materials, and consumer staples declined one point one percent, one point two percent, and one point five percent. Zacks reports volume at sixteen point eight billion shares, below average.Market highlights featured Walmart beating quarterly estimates with revenue of one hundred ninety point seven billion US dollars but shares down on soft guidance of two dollars seventy-five to two dollars eighty-five adjusted earnings per share versus two dollars ninety-six expected, per two four seven Wall Street. New jobless claims dropped to two hundred six thousand. Oil rose two percent to sixty-six dollars fifty cents amid US-Iran tensions.Pre-market futures point lower today, with S and P futures down zero point two seven percent, Dow futures down zero point two eight percent, and Nasdaq down zero point four three percent, as Benzinga notes escalating tensions. Watch continuing claims, Philadelphia Fed index, and trade balance today per Trading Economics, plus core Personal Consumption Expenditures, GDP advance, and flash PMIs tomorrow. Nvidia earnings next week loom as a catalyst.Thank you listeners for tuning in, and please subscribe. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.For great deals check out https://amzn.to/403yeYoThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
US stock markets finished Tuesday with modest gains across the board. The S and P five hundred rose seven point zero five points, or zero point one percent, closing at six thousand eight hundred forty three point two two. The Dow Jones Industrial Average climbed thirty two point two six points, or zero point one percent, to forty nine thousand five hundred thirty three point one nine. The Nasdaq composite also moved higher on the day[4].Earlier in the session, markets had shown weakness with the S and P five hundred down twenty points, or zero point three one percent, and the Nasdaq down one hundred fifty five points[2]. However, the indices recovered into the close, though technology stocks remained under pressure with the sector experiencing a volatile trading session.According to Investor's Business Daily, hosts Ed Carson and Ken Shreve discussed Tuesday's market action and highlighted key stocks to watch as part of their Stock Market Today coverage[1].Technology companies faced headwinds throughout the day. Nvidia declined zero point seven four percent ahead of its earnings report scheduled for February twenty five, while Advanced Micro Devices dropped two point two four percent and Micron fell two point six three percent[2]. Alphabet also struggled, declining one point five percent.The weakness in tech stocks stems partly from conflicting market narratives, according to JPMorgan analysts cited in reports[2]. Investors grapple with simultaneous concerns about whether artificial intelligence will disrupt software companies while also worrying that hyperscaler capital expenditures may not deliver returns.Looking ahead, listeners should watch for Nvidia's earnings on February twenty five after the closing bell, as the company serves as a key bellwether for artificial intelligence sector momentum. Chief Executive Officer Jensen Huang has indicated demand for the company's Blackwell platform data center products remains strong[2].Gold prices sank below five thousand dollars, while Bitcoin declined eight hundred eighteen dollars to sixty eight thousand thirty five dollars[2].Thank you for tuning in and please remember to subscribe. This has been a Quiet Please production. For more, check out Quiet Please dot AI.For great deals check out https://amzn.to/403yeYoThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Listeners, yesterday's US stock market saw sharp declines driven by fears over artificial intelligence disruption across sectors. According to Nasdaq, the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell one point three percent or six hundred sixty-nine point four two points to close at forty-nine thousand four hundred fifty-one. The S&P five hundred slipped one point six percent to finish at six thousand eight hundred thirty-two point seven six points, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite tumbled two percent or four hundred sixty-nine point three two points to twenty-two thousand five hundred ninety-seven point one five points[2]. Fortune reports the S&P five hundred dropped one point five seven percent as traders fled AI-exposed stocks, with the Nasdaq down two percent and the market now negative for the year[1].Tech stocks led the plunge, with the Information Technology Select Sector SPDR down two point six percent, financials lost two percent per the Financials Select Sector SPDR, and communication services declined one point eight percent; utilities gained one point five percent and consumer staples added zero point nine percent[2]. Key decliners included Cisco Systems down twelve point three percent on weak guidance, CBRE Group plummeting eight point eight percent on AI office demand fears, and C.H. Robinson tumbling fourteen point five percent amid trucking AI worries from Algorhythm Holdings news[1][2].Most active trading saw high volume at twenty-two point four five billion shares. Wall Street analysts like Deutsche Bank's Jim Reid and Yardeni Research's Ed Yardeni suggest the speculative selloff is overdone, with little evidence of AI job losses yet[1].Looking ahead, S&P five hundred futures are flat per Fortune[1], while MarketPulse notes intraday rebounds with S&P pushing toward six thousand nine hundred and Nasdaq toward twenty-five thousand after softer-than-expected January Consumer Price Index at zero point two percent monthly headline versus zero point three percent forecast, core at zero point three percent, headline yearly at two point four percent[7][8][9]. Watch tomorrow's oil rig count and ongoing Fed pause signals from this CPI[3][6]. Thank you listeners for tuning in, and please subscribe. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out Quiet Please dot ai.For great deals check out https://amzn.to/403yeYoThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Listeners, today's US stock market saw a choppy session after a strong January jobs report from the Bureau of Labor Statistics, which added 130,000 nonfarm payroll jobs, far exceeding expectations of 55,000, while unemployment dipped to 4.3 percent[1][6]. According to 247 Wall St, the S&P 500 rose 0.51 percent or 35 points early, the Dow Jones climbed 0.47 percent or 240 points, and the Nasdaq gained 0.67 percent or 164 points, though Trading Economics reports the S&P 500 closed at 6944.59 points up just 0.04 percent, with the Dow hitting a record above 50,200 amid hawkish repricing[1][2][4]. Key drivers included the robust labor data challenging rate cut hopes, overshadowing weaker consumer spending, while AI fears pressured software stocks[4].AI infrastructure shone with Micron, Texas Instruments, and Lam Research up over 5 percent per Trading Economics, but software decliners like Salesforce, ServiceNow, and Intuit fell more than 5 percent, alongside T-Mobile down 5 percent on user growth misses[4]. Robinhood dropped on Bitcoin weakness at 67,274 US dollars and missed fourth quarter revenue of 1.28 billion US dollars[1].MarketPulse notes stocks gave up early gains, with Dow retesting 50,000, S&P rejecting 7,000, and Nasdaq failing 25,500 resistance[2]. Futures exploded higher initially[1].Looking ahead, watch Friday's Consumer Price Index report at 8:30 AM Eastern Time, which could shift Fed rate expectations per MarketPulse[2]. UBS reiterated buy on Nvidia at 245 US dollars[1].Thank you listeners for tuning in, and please subscribe. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.For great deals check out https://amzn.to/403yeYoThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Listeners, U.S. stocks climbed higher today as the Dow Jones Industrial Average hit a fresh record high, building on Friday's strong gains when it jumped two point five percent or one thousand two hundred six point nine five points to finish at fifty thousand one hundred fifteen point six seven, according to Nasdaq reports. The S and P five hundred rose two percent on Friday to six thousand nine hundred thirty-two point three zero points, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq gained two point two percent to twenty-three thousand thirty-one point two one points, with technology, industrials, materials, and energy sectors leading as top gainers—technology up four point one percent—per the same Nasdaq source. ABC News attributes today's direction to artificial intelligence developments and geopolitical uncertainties like tariff threats, amid mixed economic signals including a softening labor market with job openings dropping and layoffs rising to one hundred eight thousand four hundred thirty-five in January, as noted by State Street Global Advisors.Market highlights included tech rebounds with Oracle Corporation up four point seven percent and Palantir Technologies up four point five percent as most active gainers, while Amazon dot com fell five point six percent on plans for two hundred billion dollars in capital spending, according to Nasdaq. Consumer sentiment rose to a six-month high of fifty-seven point three in February, per University of Michigan data via Nasdaq, supporting the rally despite weekly Nasdaq declines of one point eight percent.Looking forward, pre-market futures point cautiously higher amid volatility, with key events tomorrow including retail sales, unemployment claims, and Treasury auctions totaling one hundred twenty-eight billion dollars, as Interactive Brokers highlights. Watch nonfarm payrolls and Consumer Price Index later this week for Federal Reserve cut signals.Thank you listeners for tuning in, and please subscribe for more. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out Quiet Please dot ai.For great deals check out https://amzn.to/403yeYoThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
US stocks finished mixed on Wednesday as technology continued its recent slide. The S&P five hundred fell zero point sixty three percent to close at six thousand eight hundred seventy four points, according to Trading Economics. The Nasdaq composite declined zero point three percent while the Dow Jones Industrial Average gained two hundred eighty points, or zero point two three percent, as investors rotated out of technology stocks amid renewed concerns over artificial intelligence driven disruption.Energy, consumer staples, and healthcare emerged as the strongest performing sectors today. Eli Lilly shares surged more than seven percent after reporting earnings and revenue above expectations and issuing upbeat twenty twenty six guidance. Amgen climbed four point five percent following stronger than expected earnings and revenue results. Qualcomm gained two point seven percent ahead of its earnings release after the closing bell.On the downside, Advanced Micro Devices plunged more than twelve percent after its forecast disappointed. Nvidia fell zero point eight percent, Meta declined one point one percent, Broadcom dropped one point zero percent, Oracle fell three point seven percent, and Micron Technology lost three point two percent. Broadcom also saw a significant decline, falling six point thirty four percent according to Trading Economics data.The ADP report revealed that the United States private sector added just twenty two thousand jobs last month, reinforcing signs of a cooling labor market. This economic weakness contrasted with mixed signals from services activity, as US Services purchasing managers index steadied while the S and P Global composite purchasing managers index edged higher in January.The technology sector remains under pressure as a combination of fair value increases and stock declines led the sector to a sixteen percent discount from fair valuations according to Morningstar. However, small cap stocks remain especially attractive at a thirteen percent discount to fair value estimates.Thank you for tuning in and please be sure to subscribe. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out Quiet Please dot AI.For great deals check out https://amzn.to/403yeYoThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
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