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Tom Lee, Fundstrat, joins 'Closing Bell' to discuss what to make of the day's market action, if investors are 'whistling past the graveyard' and much more.

Bullish sentiment increased 3.0 percentage points to 45.9%. Neutral sentiment increased 0.6 percentage points to 18.5%.

Technical indicators point to more upside.

After the Federal Reserve's initial rate cut last month, the central bank should proceed carefully with further adjustments to its policy stance, Fed governor Michael Barr said, citing concerns that prices are still rising too quickly.

Since June-July 2025, markets have been ecstatic, printing new all-time highs almost every week. Yet, beneath the surface, some divergences are starting to show.

Most members of the Federal Reserve's interest-rate setting committee supported further reductions to its key interest rate this year, according to minutes from last month's meeting released Wednesday.A majority of Fed officials felt that the risk unemployment would rise had worsened since their previous meeting in July, while the risk of rising inflation “had either diminished or not increased,” the minutes said. As a result, the central bank decided at its Sept.

CNBC's Steve Liesman reports on the latest comments from Federal Reserve Board Governor Michael Barr.

Short-bias exchange-traded funds, which bet against stock indexes and fast-rising sectors like technology and artificial intelligence, are drawing strong inflows as lofty prices and policy risks spur some investors to position for a pullback.

A return of fund inflows into renewable energy stocks is helping to breath new life into these companies' shares, powering their strongest quarterly rise since the sustainability boom early this decade.

The U.S. government shutdown could continue impacting economic data releases next week.

Nasdaq 100 and S&P500 slip today as stretched valuations and Fed inflation concerns spark rebalancing across US stocks. Traders eye central bank signals.

Phoenix Education Partners' shares rose 18.8% in their New York Stock Exchange debut on Thursday, valuing the University of Phoenix-owner at $1.35 billion.

The Treasury Department's use of short-term bills to finance government spending, along with the Federal Reserve's signal of more rate cuts in 2025, are keeping bond-market yields steady. And this should enable officials to finance the $1.8 trillion budget deficit for fiscal 2025, which ended Sept.
It's been six months since the market (^DJI, ^GSPC, ^IXIC) lows of President Trump's Liberation Day, when sweeping tariffs were announced. Since then, markets have rebounded and spiked to record highs, while the tech sector has been surging as retail investors buy in.

JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon warned of a potential stock market correction within six months to two years due to geopolitical tensions and economic uncertainty.
The U.S. Senate continues to struggle to pass an agreement on reopening the government. @CharlesSchwab's Mike Townsend says we're starting to see material impacts from the shutdown, including slowdowns at airports due to air traffic staff "protesting" over a lack of paychecks.

WSJ readers tell us how they think artificial intelligence will change the game.
Rare earth and metals stocks continued the recent rally after China, supplier of over 90% of the world's processed rare earths, further restricted exports on Thursday.

The most accurate tool to track job losses in the economy has been postponed for a second week in a row, but a little legwork finds that layoffs are still surprisingly low even in these economically uncertain times.

Mortgage-Backed Securities (MBS) have become the most attractive they've been relative to corporate bonds since the Global Financial Crisis. Widening spreads, Fed rate cuts, and increased demand from mutual funds, broker/dealers, and banks are driving renewed interest in MBS.