Top 14 Stocks to Watch. In this article, we are going to take a look at where General Motors Company (NYSE:GM) stands against the other stocks. Jim Cramer, the host of Mad Money, recently shared his thoughts on the upcoming earnings season,
General Motors reports its fourth-quarter financial results on Tuesday, The Federal Reserve wraps up its two-day policy meeting on Wednesday and on Thursday the Commerce Department issues its first estimate of how the U.
Federal Reserve interest rate decision, Jerome Powell comments, PCE inflation, U.S. GDP, and earnings from Tesla, Meta, Microsoft, Apple and more.
The S&P 500 experienced volatility on Tuesday as tech giants like Apple helped limit declines. Mixed corporate earnings and AI-driven market events contributed to market fluctuations. General Motors' shares slid despite promising forecasts,
The S&P 500 added 0.9% on Tuesday, Jan. 28, 2025, bouncing back from the prior day's selloff in advance of the Fed's interest-rate decision on Wednesday.
General Motors has beaten revenue and earnings per share estimates from analysts in each of the last 9 straight quarters. Will the trend continue?
The Federal Reserve is expected to keep interest rates on hold on Wednesday. Plus, earnings reports from Apple, General Motors, Starbucks, Microsoft, Tesla, and Exxon Mobil.
Wall Street's major indexes experienced gains, driven by the recovery of AI-linked shares. Nvidia rebounded after a significant loss. Concerns over proposed U.S. tariffs lingered, with potential impacts on inflation and Federal Reserve rate cuts.
S&P 500 Futures inched 0.1% lower to 6,091.75 points, while Nasdaq 100 Futures were largely steady at 21,571.25 points by 18:39 ET (23:39 GMT). Dow Jones Futures were muted at 45,008.0 points.
In addition to the movement in the stock, macroeconomic factors such as Fed interest rate decisions and Global AI competition are also pulling investors’ sentiment. The market attention that Nvidia has garnered since Monday,
Nvidia, S&P 500, and Nasdaq erase earlier gains as AI fears persist. Investors brace for earnings and Fed signals amid volatile market conditions.
It takes time for the Fed’s decisions to filter through the economy — and then even more time for consumers to see the difference.