Markets - graphs: Dow, Oil, Dollar, Pound, Euro [View all]
This discussion thread is pinned.
Last edited Tue Oct 1, 2024, 03:10 AM - Edit history (16)
The graphs in the old Stock Market Watch update automatically. So they are up-to-date a few hours after each close.
Click LINKS TO GRAPHS (last Stock Market Watch)
Click bond yields and interest rates (post#4 below)
I always enjoyed scrolling through the graphs to see the trends, THANKS TANSY_GOLD !!!
Fortunately, since they update on their own, we can still see the latest (as of today's close, a few hours after the close) or as of the preceding day's close, even though the SMW is weeks or months old.
Unfortunately the text (e.g. Dow, S&P 500, and Nasdaq) don't update, maybe there's a source for those that can be embedded and updates itself like the graphs, I'm not willing to type these in every day. Maybe weekly at the end of the week. I'll ask General Computer Help for any ideas if somebody doesn't have a solution here.
Myself, I look at the "ribbon of market values" at the top of https://finance.yahoo.com , but I've long been set to the old version of that page, and I'm not sure anyone new to that page see that ribbon of values at the top (or try this, its always had the ribbon : https://finance.yahoo.com/calendar )
S&P 500, Dow 30, Nasdaq, Russell 2000 (small caps), Crude Oil, Gold, Silver, Euro, 10-Year Treasury, Pound, Yen, Bitcoin, XRP (some cryptocurrency thing), FTSE (UK market), Nikkei
Trouble in paradise: Much of the time, after market close, when I click the above finance.yahoo.com or finance.yahoo.com/calendar link, it shows me futures. Sometimes that's what I want. But often I want to see the last closing price. And when the market is open, it shows the current moment's prices. That is usually what I want, but if I'm wanting to see the last closing prices, well, its additional work to get those, one at a time, e.g. click on Dow and then it will put up a page with last closing price and numerous other stats. Repeat above for the S&P 500 ... It's strange that in this day and age everything has to be so damn hard when it could be real easy.
Bonds Here's a mini-page on current yields of Treasuries: 13 week, 5Y, 10Y, and 30Y.
https://finance.yahoo.com/bonds/
(The "CBOE Interest Rate 10 Year T No" is just the 10 year treasury yield. Why they couldn't label it "Treasury Yield 10 Years" -- the same as they label the 5 year version "Treasury Yield 5 Years", and the 30 year version "Treasury Yield 30 Years" -- I don't know
For more on bonds, see post#4 .
A few more useful links
GDPNow (estimate of GDP in next quarter) -
Latest Inflation graphs and summary table for all 3 major inflation measures: CPI, PCE, PPI (wholesale prices), both the headline "all items" version and the "core" version. The next update will be when the CPI comes out October 10 (followed by the PPI the next day). If I'm tardy in updating the above link, try
my journal, it should be near the top.
FedWatch - CME FedWatch Tool (predicts Feds Fund rates) https://www.cmegroup.com/markets/interest-rates/cme-fedwatch-tool.html
Economic Reports Calendar -
https://www.marketwatch.com/economy-politics/calendar MahatmaKaneJeeves thread of this calendar - dunno if the link is permanent, so for now look for it in
pinned posts at the top of the Economy Group listings.
An interesting article -
The stock market is the most accurate predictor of presidential elections -