Our pros always say this is a great market for traders. But what if you’re not particularly nimble? What then?
Thursday’s recovery from EU debt crisis puts focus back on fundamentals
Stocks closed higher in thin, choppy trading Thurday as investors snapped up beaten-down sectors from the previous session's sharp selloff, but ongoing worries over the euro zone crisis limited gains.
Traders slammed Green Mountain in the after hours, sending shares tumbling as much as 30%. Yes, they missed Street estimates, but a 30% decline?
Stocks plunged sharply to log their worst day in six weeks Wednesday as investors were rattled by fears over the euro zone crisis.
Futures declined sharply Wednesday as a spike in Italian bond yields to a euro era record spooked investors and amid uncertainty whether a new government in Italy can tackle the nation's debt crisis.
There are dozens of companies scheduled to report earnings on Wednesday, but Jim Cramer plans to monitor four companies' results in particular.
With several big earnings expected next week, find out which names the "Mad Money" host plans to monitor.
Cisco and other big names are set to report next week. Find out what names are on the Fast team's radar.
As this name shoots to the upside, "DrJ" said there is a lot of call buying.
The U.S. stock market has risen almost 10 percent so far in October, one of the best monthly performances in two decades. But investors in high-momentum companies including Netflix and First Solar have been left out of the rally.
On no news, the high-growth soda maker is off some 8 percent today, and as of 2pm, there were four puts purchased for every call.
Here's five dumb things that happened on Wall Street, running the gamut from Research in Motion to coffee.
Green Mountain Coffee shrugged of David Einhorn’s bashing and spiked 5% Friday after Sun Trust reiterated their buy rating and $9 eps estimate. Should you dabble?
Cramer makes the call on viewers' favorite stocks.
David Einhorn of Greenlight Capital made his bearish case against Green Mountain Coffee at the Value Investing Congress in New York. From the report: “The research shows that Green Mountain and M. Block are potentially engaged in a variety of shenanigans that appear designed to mislead auditors and to inflate financial results.”
Considering David Einhorn’s bearish comments dragged down Green Mountain 10% in one day, how should you trade the mover?