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January 27, 2026 10:56 AM EST
Tech Shares Lead S&P 500 Gainers Tuesday Morning
FROM 40 minutes ago
On a day the S&P 500 approached its all-time high, technology stocks were leading the charge.
The S&P 500 Information Technology Sector was the top performer of the 11 industries tracked by the benchmark index, up about 1.6% Tuesday morning.
Corning (GLW), Seagate Technology Holdings (STX), and Lam Research (LRCX) were the top individual stocks in the sector, with gains of about 15%, 6% and 5.5%, respectively.
Seven of the 11 sectors were in the green in recent trading.
PAUL FAITH / AFP via Getty Images
January 27, 2026 10:12 AM EST
Here’s Why Health Insurance Stocks Are Sinking Tuesday
FROM 1 hr 24 min ago
Several health insurer stocks tumbled Tuesday following a proposal from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services that would raise payments to insurers less than expected in 2027.
CMS proposed lifting Medicare insurer payments by just 0.09% next year, well below what the industry was anticipating. Wall Street had forecast a bump between 4% and 6%, according to The Wall Street Journal.
That’s after payments increased by 5.06% for 2026.The proposal also includes modifications to rules about diagnosing patients, amid a Department of Justice investigation and Journal reports last year that claimed UnitedHealth Group (UNH) trained its doctors to diagnose Medicare Advantage patients with specific conditions that could result in higher payouts for the insurer, which the company has denied.
Cheng Xin / Getty Images
UnitedHealth shares sank nearly 20% in early trading Tuesday following the news. Rivals Humana (HUM) and Aetna owner CVS Health (CVS) fell 21% and 11%, respectively.
Read the full article here.
–Aaron McDade
January 27, 2026 09:36 AM EST
The Fed’s Next Move Might Be Almost Certain—But Here’s How the Post-Meeting Comments Can Move Markets
FROM 2 hours ago
If Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell says anything unexpected at Wednesday’s press conference, you’ll likely see it reflected in prices for your financial assets, especially in bonds tied to inflation expectations.
That’s one of the conclusions of a paper by researchers at the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco who studied what happens when officials at the Federal Reserve say something surprising in their official policy statements, or in the Fed chair’s traditional post-meeting press conference.
Li Yuanqing / Xinhua via Getty Images
“Monetary policy news from press conferences—whether in isolation or in conjunction with the news in the associated statement—is a particularly important source of information, with strong effects on Treasury yields and prices of risk assets,” researchers at the bank led by Miguel Acosta, a professor of economics at the University of Wisconsin, Madison, wrote in the paper, published last month.
The paper tracked policy surprises around the Fed’s policy meetings, when the central bank announces changes to the fed funds rate to pursue its dual goals of keeping inflation low and employment high.
Read the full article here.
–Diccon Hyatt
January 27, 2026 09:13 AM EST
Salesforce Stock Gains After Software Maker Receives $5.6B US Army Contract
FROM 2 hr 23 min ago
Salesforce (CRM) shares rose about 3% before the bell after the software giant announced that it has been chosen for a contract with the U.S. Army for up to 10 years and $5.6 billion.
The Army will be able to use Salesforce’s AI software “as the foundation for its agentic enterprise,” which the company said will help the Pentagon manage costs and make decisions more efficiently.
David Paul Morris / Bloomberg via Getty Images
The contract includes a five-year base period, with another five-year optional buying period with a total purchase ceiling of $5.6 billion, and expands on previous deals where the military would buy individual pieces of software from Salesforce.
Shares of the software maker entered Tuesday having lost about a third of their value over the past year.
–Aaron McDade
January 27, 2026 08:32 AM EST
What This Week’s Fed Meeting Could Mean for Mortgage Rates
FROM 3 hr 3 min ago
With the U.S. Federal Reserve (Fed) set to meet this week, many homebuyers and homeowners are watching mortgage rates closely, trying to gauge whether the Fed’s decision could affect the borrowing outlook. For now, mortgage rates are entering the week on relatively steady footing.
According to Freddie Mac, the average 30-year fixed mortgage rate fell to 6.09%—its lowest level in three years—in its weekly reading last Thursday. Since then, our daily tracking shows the 30-year average has inched up a minor 10 basis points, leaving mortgage rates still relatively low heading into this week’s Fed meeting.
krisda Bisalyaputra / Getty Images
Where rates go afterwards is an open question. While it’s widely expected the central bank will leave interest rates unchanged—and that a pause could stretch on for months—mortgage rates react not just to what the Fed does, but to a complex web of other factors.
Read the full article here.
–Sabrina Karl
January 27, 2026 08:21 AM EST
‘Big Short’ Investor Michael Burry Says He’s Betting on This OG Meme Stock
FROM 3 hr 14 min ago
An OG meme stock just got a vote of confidence from a famous investor.
Michael Burry, the former founder and CEO of Scion Asset Management—who inspired the film and book “The Big Short” and is best known for predicting the 2008 financial crisis—said he’s now putting his weight behind a $10 billion video-game and trading-car retailer: GameStop (GME).
“I own GME. I have been buying recently,” Burry wrote in his Substack newsletter Monday, according to CNBC. Burry could not be reached in time for publication.
Tony Avelar / Bloomberg / Getty Images
Read the full article here.
–Kara Greenberg
January 27, 2026 07:52 AM EST
American Airlines Stock Rises on Rosy Profit Forecast
FROM 3 hr 44 min ago
American Airlines’ fiscal fourth-quarter results came in below analysts’ expectations. Its fiscal 2026 profit forecast did not disappoint investors.
Shares of American Airlines Group (AAL) rose 3.5% before the bell Tuesday after it forecast full-year adjusted earnings per share of $1.70 to $2.70. The midpoint of the range was well above the consensus estimate of $2.02 of analysts surveyed by Visible Alpha.
For Q4 2025, the Dallas-based carrier reported adjusted EPS of $0.16 on operating revenue that increased 2.5% year-over-year to a tick below $14 billion. Analysts were looking for $0.36 and $14.04 billion, respectively.
American said the U.S. government shutdown had a negative revenue impact of about $325 million in the fourth quarter.
Like rivals Delta Air Lines (DAL) and United Airlines (UAL), American was profitable for 205 but lost money actually flying passengers, recording a higher cost per available seat mile (CASM), 17.76 cents, than passenger revenue per available seat mile (PRASM), 16.58 cents. Southwest Airlines (LUV), the other one of the “big four” U.S. carriers by revenue, is set to report Q4 results Thursday and had a far higher CASM than PRASM through three quarters.
American Airlines shares were down about 15% over the past year through Monday.
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January 27, 2026 07:13 AM EST
Why Two ‘Idiots’—Elon Musk and the CEO of Ryanair—Are Going at It
FROM 4 hr 22 min ago
All the world’s a stage for Elon Musk and Ryanair’s Michael O’Leary. The rest of us? Mere spectators.
A disagreement between the aerospace company and the the budget airline operator has evolved into a full-blown public beef as the executives—Musk, of SpaceX, and Ryanair’s O’Leary, neither who are strangers to confrontation or shy about making dramatic public comments—have egged each other on in a series of interviews and social media posts.
This round of sparring appears to have started on Jan. 14, when Ryanair said it wouldn’t equip its planes with SpaceX-owned Starlink satellite internet service, citing fuel costs and the lack of demand from customers who take its shorter flights. When a user of X, another Musk-owned company, referenced a Reuters article with O’Leary’s comments, Musk replied, calling the airline CEO “misinformed.”
O’Leary escalated, saying on Irish radio station Newstalk: “I would pay no attention whatsoever to Elon Musk. He’s an idiot—very wealthy, but he’s still an idiot.” Musk responded to a clip of that interview: “Ryanair CEO is an utter idiot,” he said. “Fire him.”
The beef continued to escalate from there. Ryanair used its X account to mock Musk, first over a reported outage on X with the comment, “Perhaps you need Wi-Fi @elonmusk?” Musk responded, saying: “Should I buy Ryan Air and put someone whose actual name is Ryan in charge?”
Read the full article here.
–Crystal Kim
January 27, 2026 06:43 AM EST
Stock Futures Mostly Rise on Busy Earnings Day
FROM 4 hr 52 min ago
Futures contracts connected to the Dow Jones Industrial Average were down 0.2%.
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S&P 500 futures pointed 0.2% higher.
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Nasdaq 100 futures advanced 0.6%.
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