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'Mad Money' host Jim Cramer talks how to be selective in the current market.

Jim Cramer said investors should avoid buying stocks near their highs after the market's recent rally, calling it “a license to lose money.” Cramer warned that oil stocks and banks could face near-term risks, particularly as earnings season begins and cautious commentary weighs on shares.

Markets enter 2026 at a crossroads. Oil prices remain subdued but volatile, interest rates are holding steady despite rate-cut hopes, and the S&P 500 continues to climb on the back of strong earnings.

The Cboe Market Volatility Index, or VIX, rose to a nearly three-week high.

Comprehensive cross-platform coverage of the U.S. market close on Bloomberg Television, Bloomberg Radio, and YouTube with Romaine Bostick, Katie Greifeld, Carol Massar and Tim Stenovec. -------- More on Bloomberg Television and Markets Like this video?

Bill Capuzzi, Apex Fintech Solutions CEO, joins 'Fast Money' to talk prediciton markets and retail investor trends.

The 'Fast Money' traders talk the impact of the latest flurry of Pres. Trump posts on market sectors.

Victoria Greene, G Squared Private Wealth and Kevin Gordon, Charles Schwab Senior Investment Strategist, joins 'Closing Bell Overtime' to talk the day's market action.

Investors betting on a bubble burst like the dot-com in the 2000s have been miserably disappointed in recent years. Today's equity market differs fundamentally from the 2000 dot-com bubble, especially in fundamental ways.

Market Domination Overtime Anchor Josh Lipton breaks down the latest market news for January 7, 2026. Royce Investment Partners co-chief investment officer Francis Gannon tells Josh why it's time for investors to "get on board" with small-cap stocks.

Tesla (TSLA) defied fundamentals in 2025, with its PE ratio doubling despite collapsing margins and falling EPS, underscoring the risks of shorting meme stocks. Aggressively buying falling knives like Novo Nordisk and Evolution AB led to overexposure and poor portfolio balance, highlighting the need for patience and momentum awareness.

A report covering October and November personal income, consumer spending and PCE inflation data will be published on Jan. 22. An initial estimate of GDP over the final three months of 2025 will follow on Feb. 20.

The U.S Supreme Court could make a ruling on tariffs imposed on other countries by President Donald Trump as early as Friday, Jan. 9. Here's a look at what's at stake and the stocks and sectors that could see the biggest impact.

The Russell 2000 rose nearly 13% in 2025 and Royce Investment Partners co-chief investment officer Francis Gannon expects that performance to continue into 2026. Gannon says small-cap earnings are 'just at the beginning of taking off" and valuations are "pretty exciting.

Early gains eroded as new economic data and a housing proclamation from Trump shook investor sentiment.

CNBC's "Closing Bell" team discusses the upcoming earnings season, economic outlook and more with Ed Yardeni of Yardeni Research.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average is having its best start to a new year since 2018, bolstered by financial and industrial names like Goldman Sachs Group Inc. GS-1.51% and Caterpillar Inc. CAT-4.26%.The blue-chip gauge was up 1.9% through the first four trading days of the year as of Wednesday's close, based on preliminary data from Dow Jones Market Data. That marks its best four-day start in eight years, despite a pullback that saw the Dow DJIA-0.94% fall 466 points, or 0.9%, to close at 48,996.08 on Wednesday.

US stocks have started 2026 on a bullish note. Fundstrat Global Advisors managing director and global head of technical strategy Mark Newton joins Market Domination host Josh Lipton to outline his outlook for markets this year.

CNBC's senior markets commentator Michael Santoli discusses the day's market action.

On Wednesday, President Donald Trump said he would take steps to ban large institutional investors from buying single-family homes. Real estate-related stocks reacted sharply downward.