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Santa Claus was a no-show on Wall Street for the second year in a row, but stock-market bulls may be able to take their lump of coal in stride if January gets the year off to a positive start ...
The U.S. stock market had a banner year, but the holiday season has been far from festive. The S&P 500 logged 57 record highs in 2024, the sixth most since 1928, while also recording consecutive ...
A Santa Claus rally in the stock market could bring new highs to the major averages next week. The Santa Claus rally is a seven-day trading window that this year begins on December 22 and ends on ...
The Santa Claus trading window starts December 24 and should bring a stock market rally this year. Historically, the S&P 500 gains 1.3% during this seven-day period and is positive 79% of the time.
Remember: 'If Santa Claus should fail to call, bears may come to Broad and Wall' The S&P 500 currently is locked in a range between 5,870 and 6,100. A breakout in either direction should gather ...
Read more on how Santa Claus rally and historical trends could impact the stock market in December 2024 for investors ... Santa's Gift To The Stock Market. Nov. 28, 2024 10:35 PM ET 4 Comments ...
The Santa Claus Rally is a well-documented stock market pattern where equities tend to post gains during the last five trading days of December and the first two trading days of the New Year. This ...
Editorial cartoons for April 13, 2025: Stock market dive, Trump tariff retreat. ... Nick Anderson leads this week’s editorial cartoon gallery with a worried Trump supporter so “woke” by the ...
A large portion will end up in the stock market. These flows should continue until the middle of January before ebbing once again. This does not happen every year, but since 1950 December has been an ...
Forget Santa: Stock-market bulls look to ‘January barometer’ for clues on 2025 Santa Claus rally skips Wall Street for second year in a row Last Updated: Jan. 4, 2025 at 7:07 a.m. ET First ...
Santa Claus was a no-show on Wall Street for the second year in a row, but stock-market bulls may be able to take their lump of coal in stride if January gets the year off to a positive start.