Trump Says He Doesn’t Want US to ‘Rush’ Into Deal With Iran
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U.S. financial markets will largely shut down Monday for the Memorial Day holiday, giving investors a pause after a volatile stretch for stocks, bonds, commodities and currencies. The New York Stock Exchange and Nasdaq will both be closed Monday,
Intercontinental Exchange Inc., owner of the New York Stock Exchange, is working with crypto exchange operator OKX to launch oil futures contracts that never expire. Most Read from BloombergBungie Plans Layoffs After Ending ‘Destiny 2’ DevelopmentSpot the Difference: Putin Gets Trump Treatment From Xi in ChinaIran in Talks With Oman Over Permanent Hormuz Toll SystemUAE Joins Saudis,
US stock futures surge and oil prices fall after Trump pauses Iran strikes following talks; Dow futures jump 1,100 points. Dow futures rise 1,100 points while oil falls sharply as Trump cites “productive” US-Iran talks and delays planned strikes.
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S&P 500 futures held mostly steady, up 0.05%, while Nasdaq futures, down 0.025%, struggled to build on the AI-driven rally that has recently pushed stocks to record highs.
Here are five key things investors need to know to start the trading day.
The closure of the Strait of Hormuz continues to pressure global energy markets, but the market is taking an overly optimistic view of the situation.
Investors on Sunday rewarded news that a potential U.S.-Iran agreement could free shipping out of the Gulf, even if timing remains uncertain.
It looks like the bond market is betting a Federal Reserve rate increase could be on the way -- but Fed members and economists mostly don't seem to think so. Fed funds futures - the market's favorite tool for predicting rate moves - put roughly 50% odds on the U.
US stock-index futures advanced on Friday as a pullback in Treasury yields gave investors room to add risk before the opening bell, even as the Middle East conflict remained the market’s central geopolitical overhang.