US stocks finished Thursday slightly higher, with traders awaiting PCE data on Friday for fresh clues about the direction of interest rates.
Gill posted an image of a dog on his X account, causing the petcare stocks to spike Thursday afternoon.
Bed Bath & Beyond's CEO testified she had concerns about Ryan Cohen's relationship with some board members.
Gas markdowns of at least 10% are being seen in Central and Eastern Europe, the Center for European Policy Analysis said.
The stock market is threatened as lofty valuations collide with sticky inflation and slowing growth, Stifel strategist Barry Bannister said.
Stocks edged higher on Thursday ahead of new inflation data in the form of May PCE. Weekly jobless claims came in lower than expected.
"Last week's housing report provided confirmation for many that demand is somewhat worse that most realized," Sherwood Lumber told Business Insider.
Nvidia shared wavered after rebounding on Tuesday. Amazon jumped nearly 4%, crossing a $2 trillion valuation for the first time.
"We have fought many wars over oil. We will fight bigger wars over food and water," Olam Agri's CEO said.
"Even though the stock has done so well, it is still relatively cheap compared to where it was trading in the past," Eric Jackson said.
Russia's oil and gas sales are on track to reach $9.4 billion in June, Reuters estimated.
Traders are looking ahead to new inflation data at the end of the week. Nvidia shares wavered after rallying in Tuesday's session.
"This is a core game changer for Rivian and changes the capital structure of the company looking ahead," Wedbush analyst Dan Ives said.
Stocks are hugely overvalued and the economy is faltering, paving the way for a stock-market crash and a recession, B. Riley's Paul Dietrich said.
Traders told Reuters that the negative prices are due to planned pipeline maintenance from Kinder Morgan.
The S&P 500 and Nasdaq both climbed after Nvidia snapped a sell-off that had erased $431 billion in market cap.
The success of single-stock ETFs that track Nvidia has yet to spill over to other leveraged ETFs that track mega-cap technology stocks.
Trump Media made just $4 million last year and lost $58 million, financial documents show.
The divergence between index-level and individual stock performance is starting to look "eerily similar" to 2021's market dynamics.
Mike Wilson told Bloomberg that any rate cut made in response to a weakening labor market could be followed by a correction.