Abstract:The Dow closed lower Friday, snapping a four- week win streak on mixed quarterly earnings ahead of results from big tech next week. The Dow Jones Industrial Average was 0.1%, or 22 points higher, the Nasdaq rose 0.1%, and the S&P 500 added 0.1%.

The Dow closed lower Friday, snapping a four- week win streak on mixed quarterly earnings ahead of results from big tech next week. The Dow Jones Industrial Average was 0.1%, or 22 points higher, the Nasdaq rose 0.1%, and the S&P 500 added 0.1%.
The slew of mixed quarterly results continued to weigh on investor sentiment, with materials the biggest loser on the day, driven by a slump in
Freeport-McMoran Copper & Gold (NYSE:FCX) reported quarterly results that topped estimates, but profit more than halved and the mining company warned of a further impact from ongoing labor shortages, sending its shares more than 4% lower.
Regions Financial Corporation (NYSE:RF) reported first-quarter results that missed on the bottom line and a 4% slide in deposit.
In health care, HCA Holdings Inc (NYSE:HCA) jumped more than 4% as it upgraded its annual guidance after delivering quarterly results that topped estimates.
Tech, meanwhile, continued to stutter as investors await the quarterly results from big tech next week.
Alphabet Inc (NASDAQ:GOOGL) and Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT) kick off earnings for big tech on Tuesday.
Amazon.com (NASDAQ:AMZN) jumped more than 3% after as its Whole Foods business is reportedly planning to cut hundreds of jobs as part of a restructuring.
Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA), meanwhile, steadied after a slump a day earlier as the electric vehicle maker said it would hike prices of its Model Y and Model S in the U.S., just a day after slumping more than 10% following disappointing quarterly results.
Energy stocks sidestepped the uptick in oil prices as sentiment was soured by a more than 4% slump in Schlumberger NV (NYSE:SLB) as the oil field services company's better-than-expected Q1 results were overshadowed by weaker margins and cashflow.
Free cash flow for the quarter fell $265 million, missing Goldman Sachs' estimates of $772M, driven by “stronger than expected use of cash in working capital,” Goldman Sachs said. On the economic front, manufacturing activity picked up in April, climbing to a reading of 50.4 from 49.2 previously, signalling a return to expansion. Services activity also inched higher to a reading of 53.7 from 52.6 last month.


An Indian and a South African trader investing in Just Markets have one thing in common - their reported $2,000 (approx.) loss on the platform. Both complaints have come on broker review platforms in 2026. Similarly, a Pakistani trader complained about the cancellation of a fund withdrawal request worth $2,700. We investigated most allegations that came in 2026 in this Just Markets review article.

Forex traders often have to come to terms with these two popular concepts - Support and Resistance. A support level refers to the point where buyers have historically come together to prevent the price from sliding further. On the other hand, the point of resistance is where sellers have historically limited upward movement. These two levels form the foundation of many trading strategies employed by traders to spot entry, exit and stop-loss points. However, many beginners begin to think that these price levels are unbreakable. Such assumptions can go horribly wrong during high-impact economic news releases such as inflation reports, employment data, monetary policy announcements by the central bank or any other major news events. These events can trigger price movements so much that even the strongest support and resistance levels can crack within seconds.

Centinary, a new age broker, has managed to receive quite a bit of user reviews recently. However, all these reviews accuse the broker of robbing users’ funds. From loss of yuan to dollar, traders have been complaining about the alleged hassles faced while withdrawing funds from the Centinary platform. In this Centinary review article, we will take you through the complaints users have made in 2026.

Switched from one trading strategy to another but could not avert heavy losses? Wondering what went wrong despite your market analysis being spot on? It may not be a strategic issue then. It may just be that you chose the wrong lot size. Yes, a single oversized position can get your account exposed to far greater risks than you may imagine. You may be moved by the impressive profits with increasing lot sizes. But by doing so, you also invite a proportionate rise in losses. This is where you need to apply the essential 1% risk management principle. This rule helps you assess how much you can afford to lose if a trade does not go as planned.