Halftime Report is on the front lines of CNBC’s market coverage. CNBC’s Scott Wapner and the Street’
As we head into a big week of earnings next week, Scott Wapner and the Investment Committee discuss
Scott Wapner and the Investment Committee are joined today by DoubleLine CEO Jeffrey Gundlach to dis
Scott Wapner and the Investment Committee discuss rates and the market today as we closely monitor F
Wharton Finance Professor Jeremy Siegel joins Scott Wapner and the Investment Committee to discuss i
Stocks hitting new records today, Scott Wapner and the Investment Committee debate where to put your
Tom Lee joins Scott Wapner and the Investment Committee to discuss his big reversal on one part of t
Stock and rates both plunging today. Scott Wapner and the Investment Committee debate whether the ma
Rates keep dropping and tech continues to hit record highs. Scott Wapner and the Investment Committe
As Amazon, Microsoft, Facebook and Google all reach new milestones today, Scott Wapner and the Inves
Stocks hitting new highs and money flowing back to tech again. Are higher highs ahead? Brian Sulliva
The first half of the year is now behind us, stocks have had their best first half since 1998. Tyle
Tyler Mathisen and the Investment Committee debate what they think is in store for the second half o
Brian Sullivan and the Investment Committee discuss one of the best performing sectors in the last y
Tyler Mathisen fills in for Scott Wapner today as we get ready to close the books on the first half
The White House reached an infrastructure deal to improve the nation’s roads, bridges and broadband
Bank stress test results are on deck and the focus will be on how much capital they return to shareh
As Microsoft tops a two trillion market cap for the first time, Scott Wapner and the Investment Comm
Day 2 of the Halftime Report Stock Summit, where our Investment Committee share their stock playbook
We’re kicking off the second half of the year with the Halftime Report Stock Summit, where our Inves
As stocks fall hard today following some hawkish comments from St. Louis Fed President James Bullard