Robinhood is making it more difficult to get access to its options offering in the wake of a customer’s suicide last week.
Kategorie-Archiv: CNBC Financial News
While Dems and GOP squabble over extending $600 unemployment benefits, outdated technology may slow any solution
Democrats and Republicans are fighting over the $600 a week supplement to unemployment benefits, which expires after July 31. One easy solution doesn’t appear possible due to outdated technology.
The stock market is running out of steam with reopening trades fading and economic data ‚uneven‘
Wall Street analysts said investors should expect more volatility because the economic recovery is most likely to be „uneven“ and shaped like „rolling Ws.“
A tale of two recessions: Some Americans thrive as others suffer
The recession is playing out much differently across wealth, race and gender divides. Some are bearing the brunt of the economic contagion, while others hardly feel a thing.
Stocks making the biggest moves in the premarket: Alibaba, Penn National Gaming, Spotify & more
Alibaba and JD.com have a record day during one of China’s biggest shopping events. Penn National Gaming ramps up its reopening.
Trading could get wacky Friday because of some technical stock market circumstances
Traders could be in for a wild ride on Friday as they brace for a massive rebalancing that will ripple through the U.S. stock market.
Young trader dies by suicide after thinking he racked up big losses on Robinhood
A 20-year-old trader who said he lost hundreds of thousands of dollars on the free trading app took his own life, according to his family.
Stock market live updates: Dow up 200, Spotify pops 6%, oil above $40
A conversation on the latest market-moving news.
Wirecard CEO Markus Braun resigns as accounting scandal batters shares
Wirecard CEO Markus Braun has stepped down amid a deepening accounting scandal that has rocked the company’s share price.
JPMorgan Chase to close branches early on Friday in observation of Juneteenth
Chase retail branches will close at 1 p.m. on Friday in observation of Juneteenth, JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon told employees.