18-04-2025, 09:08 PM
(11-04-2025, 10:04 AM)sclim Wrote: Traders, expensive come expensive sell. no buyers? when the buffers completed. they will buy. look inside gaza if got food many people will fud money to buy.
43 months to go of economic chaos.
S&P 500 ticked higher in choppy trading on Thursday, but finished the holiday-shortened trading week lower as tariffs continued to worry investors. The broad index advanced 0.13% to close at 5,282.70 after swinging between gains and losses earlier in the session. The Nasdaq Composite inched down 0.13% to end 16,286.45.
But the Dow Jones Industrial Average shed 527.16 points, or 1.33%, to settle 39,142.23.
The 30-stock index was weighed down by a 22% decline in UnitedHealth following the insurer's earnings miss. Both Dow & Nasdaq posted three days of losses.

Nvidia retreated almost 3% on Thursday, building on drop of nearly 7% previous session. Artificial intelligence darling on Tuesday disclosed a qtr charge of about $5.5 billion tied to exporting H20 graphics processing units, or GPUs, to China & other destinations due to U.S. export controls.
While UnitedHealth and Nvidia weighed on mkt, other well-known stocks provided upward momentum. Eli Lilly surged 14% after delivering positive trial results for a weight-loss pill. Netflix popped 1% ahead streaming giant's earnings report. Stocks briefly took a leg up on Thursday afternoon after SAO Donald Trump said he expects trade deals to be reached with China and the European Union?.?. That comes a day after Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell spooked investors by saying Trump's tariff policies could drive up inflation in the near term and cause challenges for the central bank.
Still, major averages posted losses on the week, which concludes with Thursday's close, as the market is dark for Good Friday. The Dow and Nasdaq each lost more than 2% week to date, while the S&P 500 slid 1.5%. Investors have been on alert since Trump first announced his plan for "reciprocal" tariffs — which he later walked back — on April 2. The S&P 500 has dropped nearly 7% since then. The Dow and the Nasdaq have both lost more than 7% in that period.
"This is a market that is waiting and looking for direction," said Rob Haworth, senior investment strategist at U.S. Bank Wealth Management. "Right now, it's more about waiting to see what happens with those trade deals."