Hedge fund billionaire Paul Tudor Jones made a comment about female traders losing ambition after having a child. "Fast Money" trader Karen Finerman, Metropolitan Capital, strongly disagrees. (5:38)
Carl Quintanilla and Kelly Evans discuss Paul Tudor Jones' controversial comments about why he thinks fewer women than men become "great" traders, and Tudor Jones' statement about those comments. (2:59)
James Bullard, president and CEO of St. Louis Federal Reserve Bank, explains that the scale of the Fed's tapering, when it comes, will depend on data and might start very slowly to allow for a possible "reverse".
In his daily CNBC.com-only video clip, recorded today after the close of NYSE trading, Art Cashin of UBS talks with Bob Pisani about the factors helping stocks recover from a negative opening. (3:05)
Goldman Sachs recently upped its target on the S&P 500, but Doug Kass of Seabreeze Partners doesn't agree and makes the argument that a market correction could come soon. With CNBC's Jackie DeAngelis and the "Futures Now" traders. (1:46)
ChannelAdvisor, a provider of cloud-based e-commerce solutions, had its IPO today. CEO & Co-Founder Scot Wingo discusses the company with CNBC's Jim Cramer.
Kelvin Tay, Regional CIO, Southern APAC at UBS Wealth Management describes current market performance as a rubber duck awash in a flood of central bank liquidity.
CNBC's Josh Lipton looks at three stocks to watch tomorrow, including Priceline, which delivered a solid first quarter. Also, Gap announces strong sales, and True Religion reports before tomorrow's opening bell.
CNBC's Andrew Ross Sorkin reports on that Third Point's CEO has acquired the largest stake in Sony and could be looking into breaking up the company into three separate pieces.
Take a listen to this heated exchange between House member Rep. Darrell Issa, (R-CA) and Attorney General Eric Holder today, as reported by CNBC's Eamon Javers. (2:14)
CNBC's Tokyo bureau chief Kaori Enjoji delivers the latest on Honda's decision to renew its partnership with racing giant McLaren and re-enter the world of Formula One.