Stocks were stuck in negative territory Monday, with pervading worries about the recession and the ways in which quarterly earnings reports would reflect economic difficulties dominating investor concerns.
Recessions aren't known for producing triple-digit returns, but this group has done it before.
Frisbee throwing and keg parties might never be the same, but more and more people are seeking higher education online. This is how you trade it.
Friday could be D-Day for the markets. The highly anticipated December jobs report comes out and by all accounts it should move the market.
As we end a rather nasty 2008 and head into a new year that doesn't hold much optimism, Jared Levy, senior market specialist at Financial Markets Education sees investment potential in education, infrastructure and energy.
Richard Sparks of Schaeffer's Investment Research admits the current market environment is a tough one, but he still has some suggestions about where a stock investor's money should go.
Following are the day’s biggest winners and losers. Find out why shares of Chesapeake Energy and AstraZeneca popped while Circuit City and Western Union dropped.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average shed 1.5 percent, ending the day firmly in bear-market territory. GM took a hit as one analyst raised the prospect of bankruptcy. Lehman Brothers rose.
Stocks were back on the see-saw Wednesday, rising and falling with each new report or flinch in oil prices.
Stocks were back on the see-saw Wednesday, rising and falling with each new report or flinch in oil prices.
Stocks were back on the see-saw Wednesday, rising and falling with each new report or flinch in oil prices.