stocks Ebix Inc

  • Cramer makes the call on viewers' favorite stocks.

  • The strong correlation between the euro and stocks continues to hold. Stocks briefly touched below their February intraday lows shortly after the open. However, they have halved their losses as the euro has retraced some of its earlier losses, sitting now at its session high.

  • Following are moves you might have missed. Find out why shares of Fluor and the Brazil ETF popped while Ambac and Electronic Arts dropped.

  • Cramer makes the call on viewers' favorite stocks.

  • Over the next few weeks, I feel confident that’s how investors will make money, says veteran trader Gary Kaminksy – with contrarian trades.

  • Brazil’s benchmark index, the Brazilian Bovespa, was up more than 80 percent in 2009, but has fallen 4 percent so far this year. So which way should investors bank on Brazil in 2010? Rob Lutts, founder and CIO of Cabot Money Management shared his insights.

  • Cramer makes the call on viewers' favorite stocks.

  • Kevin Ferry says the "hot money" is fleeing gold and oil for another commodity: coffee. The co-founder of Cronus Futures Management offered CNBC his insights into unemployment, Federal Reserve policy and hot commodity plays.

  • The Lightning Round is extended in this CNBC.com exclusive feature.

  • Around lunchtime word broke that Rio de Janeiro will host the 2016 Olympics putting the games in South America for the first time. Is there a trade here?

  • Stocks rallied for a third straight trading session on Wednesday, so how should investors prep their portfolios Thursday? Andrew Kanaly, chairman of Kanaly Trust Company, and Jordan Kimmel, market strategist at National Securities, shared their market insights.

  • Fortune

    For the first time, Fortune opened its 100 Fastest-Growing Companies list to businesses around the world (if they trade on a U.S. exchange and file quarterly reports)—a change that landed Canada's Research in Motion in the No. 1 spot and two Chinese companies in the top 10.

  • For the first time, Fortune opened its 100 Fastest-Growing Companies list to businesses around the world (if they trade on a U.S. exchange and file quarterly reports)—a change that landed Canada's Research in Motion in the No. 1 spot and two Chinese companies in the top 10.

  • In a global downturn that has seen major companies contract and entire economies shrink, some businesses have managed to buck the trend and experience rapid growth. In annual report on the Fastest-Growing Companies, for the first time the list has been opened to businesses headquartered outside the United States. These companies, which have significantly shaken up some of the top spots, must still trade on U.S. exchanges and file quarterly reports. Fortune ranks companies based on the last three

    Fortune ranks companies based on the last three years of revenue, profit growth and total return.  So, what are the world’s fastest growing companies? Click ahead to find out!

  • Stocks are weaker with good reason, but don't get fooled: Most traders believe there is a floor under the market.

  • Bearish traders apparently see weakness ahead for emerging markets and are buying downside options in a key exchange traded fund (ETF) expected to decline in the next two months.

  • An IMF forecast suggests by next year the economies of at least two BRIC nations could be on fire. Should you strike while the iron's hot or will you just get burned?

  • You’ve heard that global growth could be on the brink of exploding, but which ETFs are best for trading the trend?

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    The Dow closed lower with investors worried about consumer spending after a government  report showed the savings rate rose in May to a 15-year high.

  • With the S&P seemingly stuck in a rut is it time to put money to work overseas?