Market strategists evaluate the crowd enthusiasm and ponder a pivot to value.
April seems set to break a streak of five positive months for stocks that stretched from November through March.
Traders are wary that the dwindling amount of notes available could fall far short of demand.
Market reactions would throw a "cold bucket of water" on any president who tries to manipulate the Fed, he said.
With higher interest rates, the idea that any economic problem can be solved with more government borrowing has become untenable.
The index that measures wages and benefits increased 1.2%.
It's time to look past old reliables like real estate and high-yield bonds, a new Morningstar report says.
The firm's lead inflation analyst thinks 3% inflation could linger long term.
The slowing churn may be good news for the Federal Reserve.
Markets are reacting to mixed economic news and earnings on the understanding that it could be worse.
About a third of all S&P 500 stock trades are now executed in the final 10 minutes of the session.
There could be more hawkish words to come from the Fed.
The economist debated Peter Boockvar, who said growth stocks would face a major obstacle, the law of large numbers.
The bank's forecasters predict 100 basis points of Fed easing this year beginning in July.
Demand for workers is still healthy, supporting wage growth.
The political scientist says the unique U.S. approach to crisis is being challenged once again.
The Texas capital was accustomed to good news. But as tech cools, the tide was bound to turn.
The market has been led by growth so long, dividend stocks have become cheaper, said these analysts.
His suggestions came as S&P 500 tech companies faced their worst month since September.
More construction is a surefire way to limit increases in home prices and rent, and that's going to take lower interest rates.