Stocks pulled off a gain Thursday as comments from a European official offered some relief on the Greece front. Consumer-discretionary stocks were the day's best performer, along with materials and industrials.
Stocks opened lower Thursday as investors shrugged off a drop in jobless claims, focusing instead on some weak corporate outlooks. Nokia and eBay tumbled.
U.S. stock index futures were lower ahead of the open Thursday as investors looked to the next batch of corporate earnings to give direction to the trading day.
In today's trading session, a total of 81 stocks in the S&P 500 reached new 52-week highs. Here is a look at those companies.
The Mad Money host is seeing a number of signs that we’ll finish the year strong.
After weeks of positioning for Sherwin-Williams to move lower, sentiment swung sharply to the positive side yesterday (Monday), as traders positioned for the paint maker to break out toward the $70 area.
Sherwin-Williams reports earnings before the bell today, and one trader is looking for a big move.
Analyst research reports these days are way too negative for the Mad Money host, so he wrote his own.
Following are the day’s biggest winners and losers. Find out why shares of UnitedHealth and BlackRock popped while Lockheed Martin and State Street dropped.
Cramer has specifically been optimistic on housing and suggests four new, creative ways to play a housing rebound.
The Lightning Round is extended in this CNBC.com exclusive feature.
A late rally pushed stocks higher Tuesday following better-than-expected earnings from several Dow components. The Dow logged its seventh-straight gain, the Nasdaq, it's tenth.
The Dow advanced Tuesday as a slew of components beat earnings expectations. But there were pockets of weakness throughout the market, including chips, hardware, banks and retail. The Nasdaq was lower.
The Dow bolted out of the gate Tuesday as a slew of components beat earnings expectations. But there were pockets of weakness throughout the market, including chips, hardware, banks and retail. The Nasdaq was lower.
Futures indicated a slightly lower open for Wall Street Tuesday ahead of a slew of earnings and Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke's Capitol Hill testimony.
While the methodology used wasn't perfect, the validation sure feels good.
Much-needed housing sales are on the rise, but partly because people are losing their homes. Cramer explains why that is good for the rest of us.
Plus, Cramer makes the call on banks, Bucyrus, natural gas and more.