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S&P 500 (^GSPC)

SNP - SNP Real-time price. Currency in USD
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5,101.30+52.88 (+1.05%)
As of 10:28AM EDT. Market open.
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Previous close5,048.42
Open5,084.65
Volume511,033,719
Day's range5,073.14 - 5,105.44
52-week range4,048.28 - 5,264.85
Avg. volume4,048,983,225
  • Yahoo Finance Video

    Stocks open higher, fueled by Alphabet, Microsoft results

    The major indexes (^DJI,^GSPC, ^IXIC) opened higher on Friday morning thanks to strong results from Alphabet (GOOG, GOOGL) and Microsoft (MSFT). Investors seemingly were able to shrug off the latest inflation print. The core Personal Consumption Expenditures price index rose 2.8% in March, slightly more than the 2.7% economists had been expecting. It rose 0.3% from February, which was in line with estimates. For more expert insight and the latest market action, click here to watch this full episode of Morning Brief. This post was written by Stephanie Mikulich.

  • Yahoo Finance

    Investors are more worried about inflation than a weakening economy

    Fresh data on Thursday showed further signs of sticky inflation, pushing bond yields higher and weighing on stocks.

  • Yahoo Finance Video

    The market is saying there's no 'growth problem': Strategist

    Despite Thursday's weaker-than-expected GDP figure, which hinted at a slowing economy, Truist Co-Chief Investment Officer and Chief Market Strategist Keith Lerner joins Market Domination to explain why this number doesn't accurately reflect the economy's growth trajectory. Lerner argues that the GDP data was fine "underneath the hood," showing that consumers and businesses were still spending, and underlying demand remained robust. He notes, "the market's hanging in there relatively well," emphasizing that a deeper examination of the GDP components revealed "there's still solid economic growth." On the inflation front, Lerner acknowledges that he had anticipated a post-pandemic economic slowdown. However, even with solid growth, he remains optimistic that inflation can be brought down to the 2% target. Addressing concerns about stagflation, he states, "It's a risk, not our base case." Lerner points to the strong performance of the energy (XLE), financials (XLF), and industrials (XLI) sectors as evidence that "the market is telling you that we don't have a growth problem at this point." This market behavior reinforces his view that the underlying economic fundamentals remain robust, despite the weaker GDP reading. For more expert insight and the latest market action, click here to watch this full episode of Market Domination. This post was written by Angel Smith