Todd Shriber

Todd Shriber

Recent Articles

Dow Jones Today: Jobless Claims Soar But Stocks Do Too

Tech is about the only game going for the market these days, but that's enough for investors to overlook some ugly jobs news again.

As Growth Gets Harder to Find, SNAP Stock Is Worth Another Look

The run also shows badly drubbed the stock was during the March Covid-19 meltdown because even with the 52 percent gain over the past month and the more than doubling off its 52-week, Snap stock is higher by just 4.72% year-to-date. While Snap's recent rally could imply near-term upside is limited, a deeper dive reveals the opposite is true. The growth trajectory confirms as much.

Dow Jones Today: Tech Leads on a Slow Day

Broader equity benchmarks meandered between modest gains and losses, indicating traders may be waiting on the ugly April jobs report due out Friday before the open of U.S. markets.

Why DraftKings Stock Is a Decent Bet, but No Sure Thing

DraftKings stock could be one of the best ways to play the U.S. sports betting boom, but it needs to turn a profit soon.

Dow Jones Today: Oil Win Streak, Partial Reopening Talk Spark Stocks

With oil trading higher for a fifth consecutive day and more states embracing the idea of at least reopening some parts of their economies, the major equity averages traded higher on Tuesday, building on the late Monday rally.

5 ETFs to Buy to Profit From Market Volatility

There are ways for investors to profit from elevated market volatility, but for many investors, these are the best ETFs to buy right now.

Dow Jones Today: Stocks Scuffle as Familiar Headwinds Reemerge

Warren Buffett dumped airline investments and opined that Boeing is too hard to evaluate for his taste, weighing on the Dow today.

There Are Better Rebound Ideas Than General Electric Stock

The impact of Covid-19 is proving palpable for GE. In the first three months of this year, the industrial unit, one of the few crown jewels remaining for GE following a slew of asset sales, lost $800 million worth of operating profit, something management attributes to the virus. Worse yet, the business bled $1 billion in cash.

No Smooth Skies for Southwest Air Just Yet

There's no denying that the novel coronavirus is dramatically reshaping the travel and leisure industry. From airlines to casinos to cruise operators, it's going to be a long time – probably several years – before these companies come close to resembling their 2019 selves. However, there are some inklings that the market's worst treatment of Southwest is a thing of the past.

iBio Stock Is Too Risky

IBIO stock gets attention because of iBio's foray into treating the coronavirus, but investors who want that exposure should look elsewhere.