The Santa Claus rally failed to materialize this year. Historically, the market's performance at the end of one year correlates with results the following year. There are also fundamental reasons ...
Abby Drey One of Philipsburg’s most iconic winter landmarks, the 37 1/2-foot-tall Santa Claus display first built in the 1960s, was damaged beyond repair Dec. 29 after winds knocked it over.
Michael Nagle / Bloomberg via Getty Images Stocks fell on Thursday, dampening investors' hope for a Santa Claus rally to start 2025. The S&P 500's average return in years without a Santa Claus ...
Stocks tend to rise in what is known as a “Santa Claus rally” over the period that spans the last five trading days of the year through the first two of the next.
The absence of the traditional “Santa Claus rally” has caught the attention of financial experts. This rally, typically observed at the end of the year, has not materialized, prompting ...
Asian stocks ended the year mainly in the red yesterday after worries about this year and profit-taking turned Wall Street’s usual holiday period “Santa Claus rally” into a mini-rout. The three main ...
Stocks typically enjoy a so-called Santa Claus Rally in the period spanning the last five trading days of the year and the first two of the next. The S&P 500 has historically averaged a gain of ...
The Santa Claus Rally, a typical year-end market surge, has seemingly failed to materialize this year, with stocks experiencing a recent downturn. However, this analyst expects the S&P 500 index ...
Santa Claus is leaving investors in the lurch once again in 2024 as U.S. stocks have struggled during the typically bullish home stretch of the year. Every year, investors look forward to the “S ...
Wall Street must have been on Santa's naughty list. The major indexes were sliding again on the fourth day of the so-called Santa Claus rally window. The Dow was down 433 points, or 1%. The S&P ...
The weakness was atypical as equities tend to do well in the last five trading days of December and into the first two days of January, a phenomenon dubbed the “Santa Claus rally”. Meanwhile ...
The Dow halved its losses by the afternoon Trader hoping for a Santa Claus rally on Wall Street found no joy Monday. AP Growth stocks such as Tesla and Meta dropped 3.1% and 2.2%, respectively.