• NYSE aims to partially reopen iconic trading floor on May 26

    NYSE aims to partially reopen iconic trading floor on May 26

    The Big Board is switching back on. The head of the New York Stock Exchange on Thursday said the iconic trading floor will partially reopen on May 26 while adhering to strict new health guidelines. In an op-ed piece published in the Wall Street Journal, NYSE President Stacey Cunningham vowed to get the world renowned …
  • Trump ‘looking at’ Chinese companies trading on US stock exchanges

    Trump ‘looking at’ Chinese companies trading on US stock exchanges

    The US has its eye on Chinese companies listed on American stock exchanges amid an escalating trade dispute with Beijing, President Donald Trump said. The feds are “looking at” the idea of forcing Chinese firms to follow US accounting rules if they want to trade on the New York Stock Exchange or Nasdaq markets, Trump …
  • Sen. Kelly Loeffler got $9 million ‘windfall’ from NYSE parent company

    Sen. Kelly Loeffler got $9 million ‘windfall’ from NYSE parent company

    Sen. Kelly Loeffler received a seven-figure compensation package on the way out of her lucrative job at the New York Stock Exchange’s parent company, a new report says. The Georgia Republican received more than $9 million in stock and other awards when she left Intercontinental Exchange, where her husband is the CEO, The New York …
  • NYSE opened its coronavirus-shut doors to facilitate IPO

    NYSE opened its coronavirus-shut doors to facilitate IPO

    The New York Stock Exchange quietly used its trading floor to take a company public late last month — days after it had shuttered the famous pit because of a coronavirus outbreak, The Post has learned. The Big Board took a group of people onto the trading floor of its historic building at 11 Wall …
  • Zoom confusion leads SEC to halt trading for Chinese company

    Zoom confusion leads SEC to halt trading for Chinese company

    The Feds on Thursday clamped down on trading in shares of an obscure, China-based company called Zoom Technologies, concerned that investors have been confusing it with the teleconferencing giant whose stock has surged amid the coronavirus crisis. The Securities and Exchange Commission said it suspended trading on the Chinese firm until April 9 because of …
  • NYSE to shut down trading floor Monday due to Chinese virus

    NYSE to shut down trading floor Monday due to Chinese virus

    The Big Board’s famous trading floor is about to go dark. The New York Stock Exchange on Wednesday said its COVID-19 screening process has yielded two positive tests. As a result, the exchange said it will close its physical trading floor on Monday, March 23, and move to a fully electronic trading system. “They’re finally …
  • New York Stock Exchange Will Temporarily Close Trading Floors After Two Positive Chinese virus Tests

    New York Stock Exchange Will Temporarily Close Trading Floors After Two Positive Chinese virus Tests

    The New York Stock Exchange announced Wednesday that it will close its trading floors temporarily and move to electronic trading only starting Monday, a decision reached after two people tested positive during coronavirus screenings. Trading floors Wall Street in downtown Manhattan and in San Francisco will be shuttered for the time being as a “precautionary step to …
  • Markets Suffer Worst Day of COVID-19 Crisis as Stocks Nosedive

    Markets Suffer Worst Day of COVID-19 Crisis as Stocks Nosedive

    A trader works on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange shortly after the opening bell, March 16, 2020. (Lucas Jackson/Reuters) The U.S. stock market had its worst day Monday since fears over the COVID-19 outbreak began rattling investors. The Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped nearly 3,000 points, or 12.94 percent — its worst …
  • Dow Jonea drop to 2,250 Points, Trading Halted One Minute after Opening

    Dow Jonea drop to 2,250 Points, Trading Halted One Minute after Opening

    Traders on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange shortly after the opening bell in New York. January 4, 2018. (Lucas Jackson/Reuters) Wall Street took another hit on Monday as the Dow Jones plunged 2,250 points, or 9 percent, while the S&P 500 fell 8 percent and the Nasdaq 6 percent. Trading was halted …