Wall Street took a late-session dive today but was able to remain in positive territory. Financials led the way as all sectors were up across the board.
Wall Street remained mostly steady today as investors watch for further developments from Europe. Financials led gainers as hopes for an EU bailout carried the day.
Eager to take advantage of the rise in online shoppers, many companies are offering sitewide deals and free shipping. Will the discounts help or hurt their bottom line?
Stocks popped in a big way today as central banks came together to boost the market's confidence in Europe. Financials led the way with a gain of over 6 percent.
Stocks dropped after statements made by the U.S. Federal Reserve provided now news of possible stimulus packages in the near future and said the economy is expanding moderately.
The classic marketing strategy of using a loss leader to attract business is alive and well, with products like the Kindle Fire and the Playstation 3 getting sold at a loss.
November sales posted sharp gains for US and Japanese automakers, making it the best month for auto sales of 2011. Honda, though, was unable to join the party as sales dropped.
Despite the S&P's announcement of potential downgrades of 15 of the 17 European Union nations, stocks edged higher for most of the day before losing steam to close.
Stronger employment numbers was not enough to keep Wall Street from paring earlier gains today. Uncertainty in Europe's debt crisis was once again the culprit.
Wall Street inched higher after dipping in early trading as optimistic investors watch stocks closely for directional signals. Economic numbers offered no encouragement.
Somewhere along the way, we've forgotten supply-side economics needs real consumer demand in order to keep things balanced. So what does this mean for marketing?
Wall Street endured a second day of volatile trading to start off the year. While U.S. economic data shows mild improvement, investors are keeping a close watch overseas.
Stocks closed flat after recovering from early losses as Wall Street watches the first trading week of 2012 closely for any indication of the January Barometer.
Stocks recovered from an early session dipped to post modest gains on the day. Major indices are approaching new multi-year highs as investors watch closely for a signal.