Gun Stocks Reverse Course as Clinton Loses Presidential Election (RGR) (SWHC)
- Nasdaq, S&P tumble as Netflix, chip stocks drag; AmEx boosts Dow
- Sony/Apollo bid for Paramount could be worth as much as $29 billion - Source
- Netflix Q1 earnings top estimates on blowout subscriber growth
- Nasdaq tumbles, Treasuries dip amid earnings, geopolitical crosscurrents
- Gold prices rally past $2,400 on reports of Israel strikes on Iran
- Jabil falls after placing CEO on paid leave amid internal investigation
- Tritium DCFC Limited (DCFC): Three Australian subsidiaries were determined to be insolvent or likely to become insolvent
- NVIDIA (NVDA) Shares Extend Drop To 10%, Erasing $212 Billion In Value - Bloomberg
- Tungray Technologies (TRSG) Prices 1.25M Share IPO at $4/sh
- Wells Fargo on Super Micro Computer (SMCI): 'No Positive Preannouncement
- Midday movers: Netflix, Super Micro fall; Paramount Global gains
- After-hours movers: Netflix, Intuitive Surgical, Nordstrom, KB Home
- Midday movers: Tesla, Blackstone, Las Vegas Sands fall; DR Horton rises
- After-hours movers: Alcoa rises; Equifax and Las Vegas Sands fall
- Midday movers: Travelers, JB Hunt fall; United Airlines rises
Gun Stocks Gain Early on Trump Victory (SWHC) (RGR)
November 9, 2016 6:43 AM ESTGun stocks are bid sharply higher on a Trump victory.
Smith & Wesson (NASDAQ: SWHC) +6.9%Sturm Ruger (NYSE: RGR) +5.6%The move higher appears somewhat counter-intuitive as Obama was seen as the sector's best... More
Two Sectors Signal Clear Clinton Victory, One Hopeful for Trump
November 8, 2016 12:34 PM ESTTraders trying to get an edge on election results are watching a few notable stocks/sectors, and currently they are signaling a Hillary Clinton victory:
Guns
Smith & Wesson (NASDAQ: SWHC), Sturm, Ruger & Co (NYSE:... More
Wall Street gains as traders bet on Clinton triumph
November 8, 2016 7:20 AM ESTBy Noel Randewich
(Reuters) - U.S. stocks rose for a second straight session on Tuesday as investors bet Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton would win the U.S. presidential election.
Wall Street sees the former secretary of state as a status quo candidate lending stability to the markets, while Republican candidate Donald Trump's stances on foreign policy, trade and immigration are less certain.
Data company VoteCastr, which is providing real-time election information through news outlets, including Slate, showed Clinton with an early lead among voters in Florida, a must-win state for Trump.
Several investors said... More