Wall Street veers upward
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OpenAI’s Sora app could fundamentally change the social-media landscape and leave Meta scrambling to catch up.
Analysts working for firms that underwrote the stock offering are now free to publish research about the shares.
US stocks jumped Monday in a broad rebound, bouncing back from Friday's rout after President Trump played down the escalating US trade standoff with China and said it "will all be fine!" Stocks recouped some of Friday's hefty losses after Trump dialed back his Friday threat to impose an additional 100% tariff on Chinese goods from Nov.
Investors on Monday were cheering a sharp rebound in U.S. stocks after President Donald Trump said trade relations with China “will all be fine,” just days after he sent the market tumbling by threatening much higher tariffs on China.
Asian stocks made a tentative rebound in early trade on Tuesday, with an uneven recovery taking place across regional equity markets after signs that trade negotiations between the U.S. and China remain on track.
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Analysts are still doubling down on market leaders, with fresh upgrades for Advanced Micro Devices, Walmart, Amazon, and Meta Platforms. Look at Advanced Micro Devices Just this morning, analysts at Mizuho reiterated an outperform rating on Advanced Micro Devices (NASDAQ: AMD) with a price target of $275 from $205.
Move over, buffer funds. Forget those income-enhanced strategies. Leverage? Who needs it. Wall Street has found another derivatives-powered bet to stuff inside an ETF: The single-stock autocallable.
Up over 400% in just three years, these industry leaders are ripe for stock splits in 2026. There were a flurry of stock splits last year, including Nvidia, Broadcom, Chipotle, and Walmart, among others. But 2025 hasn't been nearly as active a year for stock splits. That could change in 2026.
U.S. stocks edged up to more records. The S&P 500 rose 0.1% Thursday. The Dow Jones Industrial Average added 0.2%, while the Nasdaq composite climbed 0.4%.
Wall Street is seeking solid earnings to demonstrate that the stock market rally is grounded in fundamentals and not indicative of a bubble.