Supreme Court to decide fate of Trump's tariffs
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Living off of dividends is a common strategy for retirees. Of course, for it to work, you need to amass a pretty sizable portfolio. Let’s say your portfolio gives you a dividend yield of 4%. If you have $500,
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Will the Stock Market Soar or Crash Under President Donald Trump in 2026? Here's What History Shows.
While Trump is arguably one of the most unpredictable presidents of all time, investors, analysts, and market strategists often try to use the past to look for clues regarding what could happen in the future. Will the stock market soar or crash under President Trump in 2026? History won't tell us for sure, but here's what it shows might happen.
Dow, S&P, Nasdaq all in red. Stocks fell Wednesday as weak earnings from Texas Instruments (-4%) and Netflix (-9%) weighed on the major averages. Dow dropped 147 points (0.3%), S&P 500 fell 0.4%, Nasdaq slid 0.
Talk of a 2025 recession abated this summer, but economists noted a sense of instability among consumers, who were spending less, and among businesses, which were hiring less.
Now a growing number of experts warn that these new highs could be followed by new lows — a dire risk to the 62% of Americans who collectively own stocks worth $51 trillion. (1)
Despite a rough patch in the earlier part of the year in response to the Trump administration's tariff plan, it has been a good year so far for the stock market's three main indexes: the S&P 500 (SNPINDEX: ^GSPC), the Nasdaq Composite, and the Dow Jones. Through Oct. 21, they're up 14.7%, 19%, and 10.8% year to date, respectively.
Semiconductor testing equipment manufacturer Advantest declined over 8%, while chipmaker Renesas Electronics is down 6% in Asian trading on Wednesday. losses are also led by South Korean giants Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix are also down 6% each.
The fintech juggernaut’s stock plunged after weak guidance, a sharp slowdown in its Clover platform and mounting investor unease over customer losses.
Palantir has emerged as a retail favorite over the years, with daily retail cash turnover of about $302 million as of last close, the third highest among U.S.-listed shares that Vanda Track Research monitors.