Search Site

ADNOC L&S buys stake in Navig8

The company will acquire the remaining stake in mid-2027.

DAE to acquire Nordic Aviation Capital

The terms of the transaction have not been disclosed.

Emirates’ first A350 takes flight

The airline operated the inaugural flight from Dubai to Edinburgh.

NDMC arranges $2.5bn credit facility

The Shariah-compliant facility spans a tenure of three years.

Kamco Invest launches two funds

Kamco's assets under management surpass SAR 1bn.

Nasdaq edges to record

The Nasdaq digital billboard in Times Square in New York. AFP
  • All three indices finished at records the last two days, on the back of Wednesday's Federal Reserve meeting
  • The Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped 0.8 percent to 39,475.90, retreating from a serious drive at the 40,000-point level

New York, United States – The Nasdaq edged to a fresh record while the Dow pulled back Friday, as US stock markets took a breather after two buoyant sessions following mixed corporate earnings.

All three indices finished at records the last two days, on the back of Wednesday’s Federal Reserve meeting.

But major indices have since had a more subdued performance, suggesting some profit taking.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped 0.8 percent to 39,475.90, retreating from a serious drive at the 40,000-point level.

The broad-based S&P 500 slipped 0.1 percent to 5,234.18, while the tech-rich Nasdaq Composite Index climbed 0.2 percent to 16,428.82, a third straight record close.

“Even though, during the month of March, certainly we’ve seen more broadening in market leadership, today we were back to growth-style investments leading the way,” said Angelo Kourkafas of Edward Jones.

Among individual companies, Nike fell 6.9 percent after the sports giant’s forecast for the coming quarters disappointed investors.

FedEx jumped 7.4 percent after reporting better than expected results, though the delivery company said it still faces “a difficult demand environment.”

Digital World Acquisition Corp fell 13.7 percent after announcing shareholders approved its merger with Trump Media & Technology Group, generating some $3 billion for former president Donald Trump.