to your HTML Add class="sortable" to any table you'd like to make sortable Click on the headers to sort Thanks to many, many people for contributions and suggestions. Licenced as X11: http://www.kryogenix.org/code/browser/licence.html This basically means: do what you want with it. */ var stIsIE = /*@cc_on!@*/false; sorttable = { init: function() { // quit if this function has already been called if (arguments.callee.done) return; // flag this function so we don't do the same thing twice arguments.callee.done = true; // kill the timer if (_timer) clearInterval(_timer); if (!document.createElement || !document.getElementsByTagName) return; sorttable.DATE_RE = /^(\d\d?)[\/\.-](\d\d?)[\/\.-]((\d\d)?\d\d)$/; forEach(document.getElementsByTagName('table'), function(table) { if (table.className.search(/\bsortable\b/) != -1) { sorttable.makeSortable(table); } }); }, makeSortable: function(table) { if (table.getElementsByTagName('thead').length == 0) { // table doesn't have a tHead. Since it should have, create one and // put the first table row in it. the = document.createElement('thead'); the.appendChild(table.rows[0]); table.insertBefore(the,table.firstChild); } // Safari doesn't support table.tHead, sigh if (table.tHead == null) table.tHead = table.getElementsByTagName('thead')[0]; if (table.tHead.rows.length != 1) return; // can't cope with two header rows // Sorttable v1 put rows with a class of "sortbottom" at the bottom (as // "total" rows, for example). This is B&R, since what you're supposed // to do is put them in a tfoot. So, if there are sortbottom rows, // for backwards compatibility, move them to tfoot (creating it if needed). sortbottomrows = []; for (var i=0; i
Wall Street's bulls had an especially good Thanksgiving week. In addition to having a holiday-shortened work week, they were especially thankful to have the prospect of an additional rate cut in 2025 put back on the table. In response to that good news, the S&P 500 (Index: SPX) rose to close at a new all-time record high of 6,032.38 at the close of trading on Friday, 29 November 2024. The index ended the week up just over one percent over where it closed the preceding week.
There was no specific news headline that drove stock prices during the short trading week. Instead, a favorable consensus developed during the week of how the Fed's current series of rate hikes would extend into 2025. The CME Group's FedWatch Tool projects the Fed will act to reduce the Federal Funds Rate by 0.25% on 18 December 2024. After that, the FedWatch tool now anticipates that the Fed's next interest rate action will be another quarter point cut on 19 March (2025-Q1), some three months earlier than projected a week earlier. The tool has added a new expected rate change in its forecast for 2025, a 0.25% cut on 17 September (2025-Q3), which wasn't previously in the forecast.
Those changes were enough to continue the upward momentum of the S&P 500. The latest update of the alternative futures chart places the index at a level that's consistent with investors focusing on the distant future quarter of 2025-Q3, which is consistent with the FedWatch Tool's projections as of Friday, 29 November 2024.
With U.S. markets trading week shortened by the Thanksgiving holiday, much of the market moving news of the week that was came from outside the U.S.
The Atlanta Fed's GDPNow tool's projection of the real GDP growth rate for the current quarter of 2024-Q4 increased to +2.7% from the previous week's +2.5%.
Image credit: Microsoft Copilot Designer. Prompt: "An editorial cartoon with a Wall Street bull eating a Thanksgiving dinner with a dish labeled 'EXTRA 2025 RATE CUT'". The image was tweaked to add and clean up some text.
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Closing values for previous trading day.
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