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CNBC's Becky Quick reports on the 5 things to know on November 5, 2025.

My hometown of Baltimore was the first city to install gas street lights in 1816 in an effort to curb crime. More cities quickly followed suit.

For the week, the average contract interest rate for 30-year fixed-rate mortgages with conforming loan balances, $806,500 or less, increased to 6.31% from 6.30% Applications to refinance a home loan, which are most sensitive to daily moves in interest rates, fell 3% for the week.

Listen on the go! A daily podcast of Wall Street Breakfast will be available by 8:00 a.m.

Stocks grew weary of the penthouse view on Tuesday and took the down escalator. Predictably, dip-buyers are mobilizing.

AMD beats expectations, Mamdani wins NYC mayoral election, Bitcoin briefly dips below $100,000, and more news to start your day.

The most oversold stocks in the industrials sector presents an opportunity to buy into undervalued companies.

What matters in U.S. and global markets today
The US government shutdown, now in its 36th day, has become the longest in history, surpassing the previous record set in early 2019 during President Donald Trump's first term. Every week that passes costs the economy anywhere from $10 billion to $30 billion, based on analysts' estimates.

The MoneyShow Chart of the Day shows the Cyclically Adjusted Price-to-Earnings (CAPE) ratio, which climbed to 40.5 in October. Not only is that up from 37.3 a year earlier, but it's very close to the all-time high of 44.1 in December 1999 - just before the Dot-Com Bubble popped.
Wall Street bonuses are expected to rise for the second year for traders and investment bankers on surging deal volume and market volatility, according to financial compensation consultancy Johnson Associates.
Wall Street bonus season is approaching — they'll hit in the New Year. The consultancy Johnson Associates projects pay gains across high finance.
This post originally appeared in the First Trade newsletter. You can sign up for Business Insider's daily markets newsletter here.

A global tech sell-off spills into European stocks with chipmakers sinking into the red as fears grow over AI valuations. Squawk Box Europe's Steve Sedgwick, Karen Tso and Julianna Tatelbaum discuss the market action.

Masayoshi Son, the chairman and CEO of global tech investment giant SoftBank Group in Japan, suffered a $13.1 billion wealth wipeout on Wednesday – the biggest net worth drop among all billionaires in Asia, according to Forbes' Real-Time Billionaires List, amid a global selloff triggered by worries over lofty stock market valuations.

The S&P 500 ETF (SPY) is exhibiting a rare and bearish megaphone pattern, signaling heightened volatility and risk of a major correction. SPY valuations are historically high, with multiple indicators suggesting overvaluation of 120% to 209%, increasing the risk of a significant market downturn.
Most bourses declined, taking their cue from Wall Street's tech-driven fall in the prior session, amidst jitters about soaring valuations tied to AI and uncertainty regarding Federal Reserve rates.

The central bank kept its key policy rate at 1.75% and reiterated there is unlikely to be any further changes to the rate for some time.

Justices will weigh whether the president lawfully levied global tariffs without Congress's approval

Sharp falls in technology stock prices are cause for caution but not panic yet, say brokers and investors who have been riding a runaway market to record highs and some stretched valuations.