Following are moves you might have missed. Find out why shares of Barnes & Noble and TRW Automotive popped while OpenTable and Garmin dropped.
Stocks recovered from a sharp selloff in volatile trading Wednesday with the Dow breaking an eight-day losing streak, despite a handful of weak economic news, ongoing euro zone jitters and a possible U.S. credit downgrade.
Futures rose Wednesday, following a massive selloff in the previous session, after a reading on private sector employment came in stronger than expected.
The Lightning Round is extended in this CNBC.com exclusive feature.
With its stock in nosebleed territory, Netflix can’t afford to miss any kind of expectation—even perceptions. That means the questions it receives on its earnings call after the close today—and the way it answers them—will be as important as the numbers.
Cramer makes the call on viewers' favorite stocks.
The Consumer Electronics Show proved to be a lot more vibrant than I expected. The buzz going in was that everything was “me, too,” and nothing innovative would be being shown. Instead, the press conferences jumped the gun and were early by a day, and the show itself was mobbed. It turned out to be a banner year for product introductions and excitement.
See what's happening, who's talking and what will be making headlines on Wednesday's Squawk on the Street.
See what's happening, who's talking and what will be making headlines on Tuesday's Squawk on the Street.
Herein are stocks that caught the "Fast Money" traders' attention Wednesday. Find out why some popped while others dropped.
Stocks ended higher after an initial rocky response to the Federal Reserve announcement it would buy $600 billion in long-term Treasurys the middle of next year in an effort to stimulate the economy's sluggish growth. HP and Cisco rose, while AmEx and Microsoft fell.
Stocks rose after an initial rocky response after the Federal Reserve announced it would buy $600 billion in long-term Treasurys by the end of the second quarter of 2011 in an effort to stimulate the economy's sluggish growth. HP and Cisco rose, while AmEx and Microsoft fell.
Garmin shares fell sharply this year before stabilizing around $30. But after Garmin switched gears and bought a bicycle tech company, are they headed for another wrong turn?