MURRAY, Utah, April 28, 2025--Beyond, Inc. (NYSE:BYON), owner of Bed Bath & Beyond, Overstock, buybuy BABY, and a blockchain asset portfolio, today reported financial results for the first quarter ended March 31, 2025.
The S&P 500 fell 0.8%, dragged lower by Big Tech stocks.
Plug Power (NASDAQ: PLUG) stock is soaring in Monday's trading after the company published preliminary first-quarter results and announced a new funding move. Plug Power issued better-than-anticipated preliminary Q1 results before the market opened this morning and also issued guidance for Q2 that topped the market's expectations. The company paired the release with an announcement that it had secured a new funding deal through Yorkville Advisors.
Monday’s stock market slide was abating as the afternoon rolled on, but tech stocks continued to lag behind. The Dow was up 62 points, or 0.2%, heading into the final hour of trading. The Nasdaq Composite was down 0.4%.
A brutal week looms as tariffs, earnings uncertainty, and recession risks hit investors from all sides.
Shareholders will assess Greg Abel's readiness and the fate of Berkshire's decentralized culture
The first-quarter earnings season is heating up—meaning both its tempo and the numbers themselves.
Dow Jones aerospace giant Boeing is approaching a new buy point, while Spotify earnings loom ahead of the market open Tuesday.
Spotify Technology (NYSE:SPOT) recently announced a series of developments, including a new multi-year agreement with Warner Music Group aimed at expanding its music ecosystem. This, coupled with Spotify's robust Q4 2024 financial results, where the company reported net income of EUR 367 million, contrasts the volatile market environment marked by declines in major tech stocks like Nvidia and Tesla. While the S&P 500 experienced a downward trend, Spotify's price move of 17% in the last...
If the market’s performance these days is giving you flashbacks to the days of 1973 and 1974, when President Richard Nixon resigned and President Gerald Ford replaced him, it’s with good reason: They’re the only two presidents in the post-World War II era who endured a worse stock market performance in their first 100 days than President Donald Trump.