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By Inyoung Hwang and Jonathan Morgan, Bloomberg |
October 31, 2012
U.S. stocks advanced as equity markets in the world’s largest economy reopened after Hurricane Sandy caused the longest weather-related shutdown since 1888.
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By Nina Mehta and Katia Porzecanski, Bloomberg |
October 30, 2012
U.S. equity markets will reopen tomorrow after the longest weather-related shutdown in more than a century, resuming after the New York Stock Exchange was spared by Hurricane Sandy as it swept through New York yesterday.
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By Rita Nazareth, Nina Mehta and Whitney Kisling, Bloomberg |
October 30, 2012
For the first time in more than a century, weather has stopped U.S. equity trading for two straight days as Hurricane Sandy swept across New York City.
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By Nina Mehta and Nikolaj Gammeltoft, Bloomberg |
October 29, 2012
U.S. stock trading was canceled for a second day, joining bond markets, as 90-mile-per-hour winds and surging seas from Hurricane Sandy bore down on New York and paralyzed American capital markets.
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By John L. Caiazzo |
October 28, 2012
From "Frankenstorm" to fresh economic reports, markets have a lot to react to this week as the U.S. presidential election looms on the horizon.
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By Joshua Gallu and Robert Schmidt, Bloomberg |
October 19, 2012
What Mary Schapiro considered her most important task had just run aground, a symbol of the aspirations and missed opportunities of her tenure as head of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.
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By Nina Mehta, Rita Nazareth and Whitney Kisling, Bloomberg |
October 19, 2012
A quarter century after the worst one-day stock crash in history, measures to prevent a repeat are failing to keep investors from losing confidence in the market.
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By Nina Mehta and Whitney Kisling, Bloomberg |
October 2, 2012
Eliminating all trading errors is impossible and the way to address malfunctions that have plagued equity markets this year is to improve testing and oversight, industry executives said at a meeting in Washington.
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By Press Release |
September 14, 2012
The SEC brought first-of-its-kind charges against the New York Stock Exchange for compliance failures that gave certain customers an improper head start on trading information.
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By Nandini Sukumar |
September 5, 2012
NYSE Euronext’s Alan van Griethuysen, business head of the Benelux region and Asia, has left the exchange amid a review of operations.