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Professional investors are taking profits as the US stock market extends its record-setting run, leaving retail traders to carry much of the momentum in the ongoing bull market.

Forty-three days later, the U.S. government shutdown has come to an end. While it wreaked havoc on government services, flights, and paychecks for federal workers, stock market appears to have come through it unscathed.

U.S. Treasury yields held steady on Thursday as investors welcomed the end of the longest government shutdown in U.S. history.

Long live the Dow: The oldest of the three major stock-market barometers—and, usually, the least ostentatious—is popping wheelies these days.

President Trump signed a new funding bill pushed forward by Congress to reopen the federal government on Wednesday, opening up the floodgates for a massive inflow of economic data for the Federal Reserve to examine ahead of the central bank's December FOMC meeting. Former Federal Reserve Vice Chair Lael Brainard speaks with Yahoo Finance executive editor Brian Sozzi about the state of the US economy, the affordability crisis placing more financial strain on Americans, and why she would back current Fed officials cutting rates again on the backdrop of inflation and labor market risks.

Wedbush Securities managing director and global head of technology research Dan Ives and EMJ Capital founder and president Eric Jackson discuss how retail traders are transforming the world of investing.

Chris Hyzy, Bank of America Private Bank, joins 'The Exchange' to discuss if the market's rising needs a December rate cut, what's keeping equities moving higher and much more.

Is AI a bubble or a generational boom? Yahoo Finance convenes Wedbush Securities managing director and global head of technology research Dan Ives, EMJ Capital founder and president Eric Jackson, and BlackRock (BLK) Americas chief investment and portfolio strategist Gargi Chaudhuri to debate Nvidia (NVDA), Tesla (TSLA), OpenAI (OPAI.PVT), and how AI will reshape jobs, markets, and the next leg of the AI trade.

Some tech companies may perform better than others as valuations continue to grow. We may see a pivot from who can build the most to who can utilize the most in AI.

European financial stability officials are debating whether to create an alternative to Federal Reserve funding backstops by pooling dollars held by non-U.S. central banks in a bid to reduce their reliance on the U.S. under the Trump administration, five officials familiar with the matter said.

The S&P 500 is likely in a trading range.

Markets are pricing in a December rate cut, but growing FOMC division and Powell's caution make this outcome less certain. Inflation hawks and dovish members are split, with upcoming FOMC voting changes and Powell's nearing exit adding to uncertainty.

Morgan Stanley's Mike Wilson says the markets are "breathing a sigh of relief" now that the US government shutdown is over. Wilson talks about how the lack of economic data could impact the Federal Reserve's ability to cut rates, but he says some data has been erratic and less reliable.

Alan Rechtschaffen, UBS Global Wealth senior portfolio manager, joins CNBC's 'Money Movers' to discuss market outlooks,

All phases of the foreclosure process are seeing big increases, as homeowners fall behind on mortgage payments due to stress in the economy.

Large-cap growth stocks remain the main driver of global equity returns amid ongoing AI investment. We believe sustained earnings growth will be key to validating high valuations in the AI sector.

The retail consumer is struggling with a forming K-shaped economy, says @CharlesSchwab's Joe Mazzola. He believes the markets want to see more economic data to clear the "murky" air around the economy.

Gary Stern, former Minneapolis Fed president, joins CNBC's 'Money Movers' to discuss macro outlooks.

“We will never know what the unemployment rate was in October,” says National Economic Council Director Kevin Hassett. He addressed reporters Thursday on the release of employment data for September and October and payments for furloughed federal workers now that the US government shutdown is over.

Americans are upbeat on the economy but not their own finances. That's a problem.