Search Results | Showing 1 - 8 of 8 results for "Seven trading days" |
| | ... But I digress. Ups and downs of these magnitudes have now become big news because, as Bloomberg points out, "Seven trading days into October, the S&P 500 has posted five days of moves of more than 1 percent. The index went without a 1 percent move for ... |
| | | ... September 6, the day before the federal election. The market has touched five-year highs and risen on six out of seven trading days since September 5 gaining more than 2.0 per cent. The benchmark S&P/ASX200 index gained 28.4 points, or 0.54 per cent ... |
| | | ... September 6, the day before the federal election. The market has touched five-year highs and risen on six out of seven trading days since September 5 gaining more than 2.0 per cent. The benchmark S&P/ASX200 index gained 28.4 points, or 0.54 per cent ... |
| | | As surely as night follows day, an up day on Wall Street followed the previous one's down. Over the past seven trading days, the S&P 500 displayed this classic sawtooth pattern. Here are the stats - and the rationales as headlined: 06 June: Up 2.3% ... |
| | | ... And if this year's going to be in that "correct 75% of the time" basket, it's gonna be a good year. With only seven trading days to go before January's done, most major equity markets are up... some even big time. The S&P 500 index is up 4.6% so far ... |
| | | ... 0.34 points, or 0.01 per cent, at 3,227.25, after losing 19.5 points on Tuesday, its sixth decline in the past seven trading days. In early trading on Thursday, the index was little changed, rising 3.63 points to 3,230.88. |
| | | ... financial stocks fell and investors collected profits from the advance that saw the Dow rise 14 per cent over seven trading days. One reason for the market's pause after such a big surge: It ran out of upbeat economic and corporate news the past two ... |
| | | ... coincided with the very month that the S&P bounced back and continued to rise. Coincidence or not, the first seven trading days of October - before the bail-outs and worldwide government intervention - a record US$31 billion flew out of US equity mutual ... |
|