Unbiased AI-powered news
Imbalances showed more sell orders than buy orders across major indexes at the close. The data covered the S&P 500, Nasdaq 100, Dow 30, and Magnificent 7 stocks.
Market-on-close imbalances recorded net sell orders of $407 million for the S&P 500, $440 million for the Nasdaq 100, and $390 million for the Dow 30. The same figures showed a smaller net sell imbalance of $3 million for the group of stocks known as the Magnificent 7. These numbers reflect the difference between buy and sell orders submitted for execution at the closing auction on major U.S.
exchanges.
These outlets didn't split into competing frames — coverage was uniform.
Top stories every evening. Bias-free. Ranked for relevance.
cnbc.comKevin Warsh told the House Financial Services Committee on July 14 that the Federal Reserve has no tolerance for persistently high inflation. The testimony followed the release of June consumer price data showing the largest monthly decline since 2020.
algemeiner.comHakeem Jeffries stated he will oppose an amendment that would end U.S. funding for Israel. The proposal is attached to the fiscal 2027 State Department spending bill and has divided Democrats.
cnbc.comFed Chair Kevin Warsh said the United States should not bail out any sector, including crypto, during his semiannual monetary policy report to Congress. He also stated that the Treasury can use the Exchange Stabilization Fund for swap lines unrelated to the Federal Reserve's mone…