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The U.S. Economy Works but Does it Work for You?
U.S. stocks fell at the opening bell Tuesday, with the Dow down 379 points (-0.82%) to 45,688.1, the S&P 500 off 0.95% to 6,591.80, and the Nasdaq lower by 1.38% to 22,380.8. Small caps weakened as the Russell 2000 slipped 1.23% to 241.41. In commodities, crude oil retreated 1.95% to $58.33 while gold eased 0.22% to $4,124.10.
Early trading centered on Wall Street’s
which opened the reporting slate with broadly solid third-quarter results. posted $4.1 billion in net income (+37% year over year) on $15.18 billion of revenue (+20%), powered by a 42% jump in investment-banking fees to $2.7 billion and firmer trading (FICC +17% to $3.47 billion). CEO David Solomon credited “the strength of our client franchise and continued recovery in capital markets,” adding that the quarter “demonstrates both resilience and the power of our diversified business model.”delivered a cleaner credit picture: provision for losses fell to $681 million from $1.01 billion in Q2 as management guided net interest income to $12.4–$12.5 billion for the fourth quarter and said 2025 NII should track roughly in line with 2024. CEO Charlie Scharf pointed to “broad-based growth across both our consumer and commercial businesses,” a message investors often prize when margins are compressing across the sector.
At
, scale and trading heft remained the calling cards. The bank recorded $14.4 billion of net income and $47.1 billion of managed revenue (+9%), highlighted by record Markets revenue of $8.9 billion (+25%). Chairman and CEO Jamie Dimon called the quarter “strong,” but cautioned about a “heightened degree of uncertainty stemming from complex geopolitical conditions, tariffs and trade uncertainty, elevated asset prices, and the risk of sticky inflation.” The firm’s ROE was 17% and CET1 14.8%, with $12.1 billion returned to shareholders.Despite the beats, the broader tape opened risk-off. Falling oil—down nearly 2%—can pressure energy shares, while a softer gold price hints at limited haven bid even as equities sag. For bank stocks, the mix of resilient fee income (IB/trading, wealth) and steadier but slower NII remains the theme: investors will parse balance-sheet quality and expense discipline as managements navigate a late-cycle backdrop flagged by
and echoed in Goldman’s capital-markets-driven rebound.Adam Shapiro is a three-time Emmy Award–winning content creator, former network news correspondent, and founder of the multimedia production company TALKENOMICS. At AInvest, he created and launched Capital & Power, a video podcast series designed to drive engagement and establish thought leadership, while also producing original live streams, financial articles, and investor-focused video content. Previously, as a correspondent at FOX Business, Shapiro established the network’s Washington, D.C. bureau, reported from the White House, Capitol Hill, and the Federal Reserve, and secured exclusive bipartisan interviews with influential leaders. His reporting helped solidify FOX Business as the most-watched business channel on television. At the same time, his original Talkenomics series drew tens of thousands of viewers per episode through insightful conversations with policymakers, economists, and thought leaders. At Yahoo Finance, he played a critical leadership role in expanding digital programming to eight hours of live, bell-to-bell financial news coverage, dramatically increasing traffic from 68M to 104M unique monthly visitors and growing ad revenue from zero to over $50 million annually. Yahoo Finance continues to benefit from the credibility of Shapiro’s exclusive interviews with former President Donald Trump and numerous Fortune 500 CEOs.

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