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  • Is Big Tech back? Meta’s and Microsoft’s stocks score largest weekly gains since May.

    Is Big Tech back? Meta’s and Microsoft’s stocks score largest weekly gains since May.

    By Emily Bary

    Meta and Microsoft shares have struggled for momentum over the past three months but rode improving market sentiment this week

    Shares of Meta and Microsoft, led by Mark Zuckerberg and Satya Nadella, respectively, staged resurgent performances this week.

    During a big week for Big Tech, Meta Platforms and Microsoft shares notched their largest weekly gains in over six months. Is sentiment meaningfully flipping for those beaten-down plays?

    The rallies in Meta (META) and Microsoft (MSFT) came as the broad-market mood improved, reflecting investors’ growing expectation that the Federal Reserve will cut interest rates at its December meeting. A rate cut is seen as favorable for technology stocks, and especially for the artificial-intelligence trade. The Nasdaq Composite Index COMP closed the week 4.9% higher, while the S&P 500 SPX climbed 3.7%.

    Meta’s stock advanced 9% on the week to seal its best weekly performance since May 2. The week’s gain snapped a stretch of four consecutive weekly declines and outperformed Alphabet’s stock (GOOG) (GOOGL), the new market darling.

    See also: These two ‘Magnificent Seven’ stocks could be the strongest survivors of an AI apocalypse

    Meanwhile, Microsoft’s 4.2% rise was enough for its strongest weekly performance since May 2, as well. Within the “Magnificent Seven” grouping of large technology stocks, all but Nvidia (NVDA) landed in positive territory for the week. Tesla’s stock (TSLA) was the biggest gainer, up 10%.

    The Roundhill Magnificent Seven ETF MAGS staged a 5.2% rise on the week, snapping a streak of three consecutive weekly drops. But Citi analysts noted Monday that the “Magnificent Seven” have started to behave less like a monolithic group lately.

    Meta and Microsoft shares have generally struggled for momentum in recent months, with Meta off 13.7% over a three-month span and Microsoft down 3.5%.

    Don’t miss: Is the ‘Magnificent Seven’ over? Focus on these three stocks in particular.

    In the aftermath of Meta’s third-quarter earnings report, investors began to more heavily scrutinize the company’s heightened artificial-intelligence spending given what’s seen to be a murky path to monetization. Whereas Microsoft, Amazon.com (AMZN) and Alphabet have cloud businesses that can financially benefit from the AI boom, Meta doesn’t. The company says that AI has helped it improve creative tools for advertisers and content recommendations for users, but Wall Street isn’t sure that other bets, like a chatbot, will pay off.

    Don’t miss: Meta’s stock has been under heavy pressure. Now the company is undergoing a shakeup.

    BNP Paribas analyst Nick Jones, who initiated coverage of Meta shares with a bullish rating earlier this week, agreed that success in large language models looks far from certain but praised the company’s monetization potential beyond that.

    Read: Meta’s stock finds a new defender, who predicts 30% upside from here

    Microsoft’s stock pressure has been somewhat more puzzling for Wall Street analysts, though they’ve come up with some theories, many of which relate to close partner OpenAI. First investors were worried that OpenAI would diversify away from Microsoft, but lately the concern has been that OpenAI might not even be the future of artificial intelligence, as Alphabet’s efforts gain steam.

    In a volatile year, shares of Microsoft are now up 16.7% on a year-to-date basis, a performance that ranks third within the “Magnificent Seven” and is roughly in line with the S&P 500’s 16.5% gain. And shares of Meta, which as recently as last week flirted with a wipeout of all their 2025 gains, are now ahead 10.7% on the year.

    -Emily Bary

    This content was created by MarketWatch, which is operated by Dow Jones & Co. MarketWatch is published independently from Dow Jones Newswires and The Wall Street Journal.

    (END) Dow Jones Newswires

    11-28-25 1316ET

    Copyright (c) 2025 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.

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  • AHA Ventures Bets Big on Women’s Heart Disease Innovation

    AHA Ventures Bets Big on Women’s Heart Disease Innovation

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  • Stocks Rise After CME Mess, Erasing November Loss: Markets Wrap

    Stocks Rise After CME Mess, Erasing November Loss: Markets Wrap

    (Bloomberg) — US stocks advanced in thin trading after a technical outage at the Chicago Mercantile Exchange disrupted premarket activity. Bonds edged lower.

    The S&P 500 rose 0.5% in a post-holiday shortened session and was back within spitting distance of all-time highs. Volume was more than 25% below the 30-day average as Friday trading closed at 1:00 p.m. Earlier, a data-center fault had affected multiple markets, with the issue lasting longer than a similar outage in 2019. The Nasdaq 100 rose 0.8% with Intel Corp. among its biggest gainers. Amazon.com Inc. shares gained 1.8% and Walmart Inc. hit a record on what’s traditionally one of the biggest US shopping days of the year.

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    Foreign-exchange markets, which had continued to traded throughout the day, saw no major volatility after the EBS platform reopened at 7:00 a.m.

    “The spillover from the Thanksgiving holiday and the fact there is no US data may on the face of it lessen the impact,” said Daniel Noorian, head of execution and quantitative services at Liquidnet.

    The CME halt was caused by a cooling system malfunction at a data center in the Chicago area, according to facility operator CyrusOne.

    “Some market participants will take advantage of possible differences in prices,” said Guillermo Hernandez Sampere, head of trading at asset manager MPPM. “The majority will pause trading for risk reasons until the issues are resolved, otherwise losses are possible.”

    For US stocks, expectations that the Federal Reserve will cut interest rates faster than initially anticipated fueled a late-month rebound.

    The biggest weekly advance in five months capped off a choppy November after swollen technology stock valuations stirred up unease on Wall Street. The gain buoyed the broader barometer of US stocks as it notched a seven-month winning streak. But investors rotating away from artificial intelligence winners and into defensive sectors like health care led the tech-heavy Nasdaq 100 to log its first monthly loss since March.

    The broader US stocks gauge had been down as much as 4.7% in November barely more than a week ago, as worries over stretched technology valuations rattled traders. Money markets were assigning roughly an 80% chance of a Fed cut in December before the CME disruption hit.

    “For now, the data supports the soft landing, and that contributed to the continued equity rally ahead of Thanksgiving,” wrote Tom Essaye of the Sevens Report. “However, there remain a lot of economic unknowns right now and there are simmering risks that the economy is not as strong as investors believe given the lack of government data in recent months.”

    Essaye said there could be risk-off money flows in December if upcoming data disappoint. Next week, statistics-starved investors will be watching for Challenger, Gray & Christmas job cuts and ADP’s private-payrolls reports as well as a reading of the Fed’s favored inflation gauge on Friday.

    Moves across global equities were muted amid thin volumes. Europe’s Stoxx 600 edged up 0.2%, while an Asian gauge trimmed gains after a four-day rally. Yield on the 10-year Treasury rose to 4.02% while the dollar held steady.

    In commodities, oil was on track for a fourth monthly decline as traders looked ahead to this weekend’s OPEC+ meeting and assessed how a possible Ukraine peace agreement might influence an already oversupplied market.

    Gold traders faced a volatile session as the CME outage rippled through trading. The disruption affected activity across contracts including gold futures and Comex options, often used to hedge exposure to London prices. Spot bullion resumed a climb as trading was restored, advancing more than 1%.

    What Bloomberg Strategists Say…

    Gold’s main drivers — central-bank buying, Fed rate cuts, a weaker dollar, concerns about the US central bank’s independence, and a loyal crew of ETF holders — all remain in place. There’s also concern in the background about swelling debt burdens in several developed economies and, by extension, the standing of fiat currencies.

    — Jake Lloyd-Smith Energy and Commodities Editor, Singapore

    Some of the main moves in markets:

    Stocks

    The S&P 500 rose 0.5% as of 1 p.m. New York time The Nasdaq 100 rose 0.8% The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 0.6% The MSCI World Index rose 0.5% Currencies

    The Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index fell 0.1% The euro was little changed at $1.1602 The British pound was little changed at $1.3235 The Japanese yen was little changed at 156.23 per dollar Cryptocurrencies

    Bitcoin fell 0.8% to $90,683.7 Ether rose 0.1% to $3,037.02 Bonds

    The yield on 10-year Treasuries advanced three basis points to 4.02% Germany’s 10-year yield was little changed at 2.69% Britain’s 10-year yield declined one basis point to 4.44% Commodities

    West Texas Intermediate crude rose 1.4% to $59.47 a barrel Spot gold rose 1.4% to $4,217.17 an ounce This story was produced with the assistance of Bloomberg Automation.on.

    –With assistance from Subrat Patnaik, James Hirai, Sujata Rao, Macarena Muñoz and Christian Dass.

    ©2025 Bloomberg L.P.

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  • ‘Sexy and a little daring, but never too much’: sheer skirts hit the sweet spot | Skirts

    ‘Sexy and a little daring, but never too much’: sheer skirts hit the sweet spot | Skirts

    Fashion loves nothing more than an extreme trend, one difficult to imagine transferring to most people’s everyday lives. See naked dressing, where stars on the red carpet wear transparent and sometimes barely there gowns.

    This party season,…

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  • Inauguration of the Official Milano Cortina 2026 Megastore in Piazza Duomo

    Inauguration of the Official Milano Cortina 2026 Megastore in Piazza Duomo

    On 28 November 2025 the new official megastore of the Milano Cortina 2026 Olympic and Paralympic Winter Games has been inaugurated in Piazza Duomo. The large temporary store will be open to the public every day of the week, until the end of…

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  • The Best Black Friday Smart Home Deals on Doorbells, Thermostats, and Speakers

    The Best Black Friday Smart Home Deals on Doorbells, Thermostats, and Speakers

    I’ve been testing and covering smart home devices for over a decade, so I know a good deal when I see one. Right now, the best Black Friday smart home deals feature excellent savings on convenient smart…

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  • The Profound Impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic on the Epidemiology of Quadriceps and Patellar Tendon Ruptures: Insights From a Single Trust in the United Kingdom

    The Profound Impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic on the Epidemiology of Quadriceps and Patellar Tendon Ruptures: Insights From a Single Trust in the United Kingdom

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  • Wall Street edges higher in thin post-holiday trade – Reuters

    1. Wall Street edges higher in thin post-holiday trade  Reuters
    2. Dow Jones Today: Stocks End Higher on Black Friday; Indexes Log Best Week Since June But Nasdaq Snaps Seven-Month Winning Streak  Investopedia
    3. US markets today: Wall Street edges higher on final trading day of November; CME outage halts futures bri  Times of India
    4. Stock Market Today: U.S. Stocks Seek Fifth Consecutive Day of Gains in Abbreviated Trading Session  Yahoo Finance
    5. Holiday Trading Lifted Stocks But Left Questions For AI  Finimize

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  • Dieting in middle age may harm the brain, Israeli researchers warn

    Dieting in middle age may harm the brain, Israeli researchers warn

    While weight loss in middle age could help the waistline, it may also hurt the brain, researchers at Ben-Gurion University of the Negev have warned.

    The scientists found that after diet-induced obesity in middle-aged mice, weight loss…

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  • Global futures reopen after exchange operator CME hit by hours-long outage | Financial Markets News

    Global futures reopen after exchange operator CME hit by hours-long outage | Financial Markets News

    CME blamed the outage, which halted trading for more than 11 hours, on a cooling failure at a data centre in Chicago.

    Global futures markets were thrown into chaos for several hours after CME Group, the world’s largest exchange operator, suffered one of its longest outages in years, halting trading across stocks, bonds, commodities and currencies.

    By 13:35 GMT on Friday, trading in foreign exchange, stock and bond futures as well as other products had resumed, after having been knocked out for more than 11 hours because of an outage at an important data centre, according to LSEG data.

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    CME blamed the outage on a cooling failure at data centres run by CyrusOne, which said its Chicago-area facility had affected services for customers, including CME.

    The disruption stopped trading in major currency pairs on CME’s EBS platform, as well as benchmark futures for West Texas Intermediate crude, Nasdaq 100, Nikkei, palm oil and gold, according to LSEG data.

    ‘A black eye’

    Trading volumes have been thinned out this week by the United States Thanksgiving holiday, and with dealers looking to close positions for the end of the month, there was a risk of volatility picking up sharply later on, market participants said.

    “It’s a black eye to the CME and probably an overdue reminder of the importance of market structure and how interconnected all these are,” Ben Laidler, head of equity strategy at Bradesco BBI, said.

    “We complacently take for granted that much of the timing is frankly not great. It’s month-end, a lot of things get rebalanced.”

    “Having said that, it could have been a lot worse; it’ll be a very low-volume day. If you’re going to have it, there would have been worse days to have a breakdown like this,” he said.

    Futures are a mainstay of financial markets and are used by dealers, speculators and businesses wishing to hedge or hold positions in a wide range of underlying assets. Without these and other instruments, brokers were left flying blind, and many were reluctant to trade contracts with no live prices for hours on end.

    “Beyond the immediate risk of traders being unable to close positions – and the potential costs that follow – the incident raises broader concerns about reliability,” said Axel Rudolph, senior technical analyst at trading platform IG.

    A few European brokerages said earlier in the day they had been unable to offer trading in some products on certain futures contracts.

    Regulators are tracking the situation, with both the Commodity Futures Trading Commission and Securities and Exchange Commission confirming they are aware of the issue and conducting ongoing surveillance.

    Biggest exchange operator

    CME is the biggest exchange operator by market value and says it offers the widest range of benchmark products, spanning rates, equities, metals, energy, cryptocurrencies and agriculture.

    Average daily derivatives volume was 26.3 million contracts in October, CME said earlier this month.

    The CME outage on Friday comes more than a decade after the operator had to shut electronic trading for some agricultural contracts in April 2014 due to technical problems, which at the time sent traders back onto the floor.

    More recently, in 2024, outages at LSEG and Switzerland’s exchange operator briefly interrupted markets.

    CME’s own shares were up 0.4 percent in premarket trading.

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