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Counselor to the Treasury Secretary Joe Lavorgna joins 'Mornings with Maria' to unpack the economic hit from the government shutdown and what delayed data means for markets, inflation, and investor confidence. #foxbusiness #morningswithmaria

The White House announced new trade deals with Ecuador, Guatemala, El Salvador and Argentina which would reduce tariffs on several imports.

Bank of America's Michael Hartnett says most asset allocators are likely to stay bullish on stocks and less so on bonds.

Stock futures are sharply lower this morning as the technology sector remains under pressure; the Trump administration is looking to reduce tariffs on imported food items such as coffee and bananas; Microsoft (MSFT) and Amazon (AMZN) are reportedly backing efforts to restrict the ability of chipmakers such as Nvidia (NVDA) to sell to China; Paramount (PSKY), Comcast (CMCSA) and Netflix (NFLX) are reportedly preparing bids to purchase Warner Bros. Discovery (WBD); and shares of StubHub (STUB) are tumbling after the ticket seller declined to provide current-quarter guidance to investors.

The recent market sell-off has indiscriminately impacted both overvalued and reasonably priced stocks, especially in technology. Fed officials' reluctance to commit to a December rate cut increased uncertainty, but the long-term path for rates remains lower.

As of Nov. 14, 2025, two stocks in the financial sector could be flashing a real warning to investors who value momentum as a key criteria in their trading decisions.

The cryptocurrency market was also hit by a selloff, with the price of bitcoin dropping below $96,000 for the first time in six months. The world's most valuable cryptocurrency is down more than 6.9% over the past 24 hours, falling to $95,909.21.

Ron Baron, Baron Capital chairman and CEO, joins 'Squawk Box' to discuss the latest market trends, future of Tesla, CEO Elon Musk's pay package, his thoughts on Elon Musk, what to expect from the 32nd annual Baron Investment Conference, and more.

The “buy the dip” financial news teleprompter readers and the 30-year-old portfolio managers who have never seen a market crash are always insisting that stocks are going to the moon.

U.S. stock futures point to a bleak open for Wall Street shares on Friday on investor concerns over interest rates and an AI bubble.

On CNBC's “Mad Money Lightning Round,” on Thursday, Jim Cramer said he would not own CarMax, Inc. (NYSE: KMX) stock. “I think that the business is really bad there,” he noted.

Oracle is on track for its worst week of the year and its worst quarter since 2002. New foreclosure starts in October jumped 20% from a year ago.

8am: Nasdaq set to fall for fourth day US markets are expected to extend their losses when trading gets under on Friday, with the Nasdaq bearing the brunt of the negative sentiment. With an hour and a half to go before the markets open, Nasdaq futures are 1.5% lower, with those for the S&P 500 and the Dow Jones down 1% and 0.6% respectively.

A surge in market liquidity is imminent, driven by potential government stimulus checks and the end of the U.S. government shutdown. This liquidity injection, alongside the Fed's discreet technical easing, could boost equities but risks reigniting inflation concerns.

Nasdaq 100 futures drop 1.3% pre-open as tech stocks slide. AI trade, Fed rate cut doubts, and weak sentiment weigh on US stock market outlook.

Four cannabis stocks are demonstrating significant technical momentum, seemingly undeterred by new regulatory headwinds from Washington.

Market anxiety is high despite strong stock prices, driven by uncertainty around AI, liquidity, and cyclical growth. The current bull market is top-heavy, with AI-driven mega caps dominating returns and facing increased scrutiny over future growth and spending.

Dow futures were under pressure on Friday, falling about 214 points, roughly 0.5% as investors turned cautious ahead of key economic data and fresh Fed commentary. The drop came after a round of hawkish remarks from Fed officials, which dampened hopes for any near-term rate cuts.

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Logan Mohtashami, Lead Analyst at HousingWire, says 50-year mortgages won't fix the market; what housing truly needs is mortgage rates in the low 6% range to revive demand and stabilize sales.