A Wisconsin-based company rang the closing bell at the New York Stock Exchange Thursday — the worst day for Wall Street since 2020.
Shopify (NASDAQ: SHOP) removed its U.S. shares from the New York Stock Exchange and relisted them on the Nasdaq Stock Exchange. The company did not give an explicit reason for the change, but the goal was probably to make itself eligible for inclusion in the Nasdaq-100.
Long a conservative media also-ran, Newsmax’s stock price has risen and fallen dramatically throughout the week.
Markets plunged as Wall Street opened on Thursday morning after Donald Trump unveiled his latest wave of tariffs on what the president called “Liberation Day.”Trump’s announcement sent shockwaves through markets around the globe,
President Trump’s tariff plans are much more severe than many traders feared, driving a steep selloff in evening trading. U.S. stock-index futures dropped in off-hours trading as investors parsed the details of Trump’s sweeping new tariff policies.
Newsmax's shares closed with a more-than-eight-fold gain at $83.51 on Monday, partly buoyed by retail interest.
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The move could bolster Intercontinental Exchange-owned NYSE, which on Monday became the first exchange to operate in Texas.
Global markets are tense as investors await President Donald Trump's much-anticipated "Liberation Day" tariff announcement.
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On Wall Street, the S&P 500 rose 0.6% in another roller-coaster day, after being down as much as 1.7% during the morning. The reversal helped the index shave its loss for the first three months of the year to 4.6%, making it the worst quarter in two-and-a-half years.
Equity Stock Transfer congratulates Chris Ruddy and Newsmax on this milestone and thanks the team at Digital Offering and Vinyl Equity for their assistance in processing the transfers. Equity Stock Transfer through its relationship with Vinyl Equity helped achieve this success using custom systems software jointly developed to service large private offerings which utilize general solicitation and advertising for investors as allowed under the Jobs Act and Regulation D under the Securities Act of 1933.