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The Senate Banking Committee voted to advance Kevin Warsh's nomination to lead the Federal Reserve. The party-line vote tees up President Donald Trump's pick for a final confirmation vote in the Republican-controlled Senate.

The Senate Banking Committee advanced Kevin Warsh's nomination as Fed chair on Wednesday, teeing up the full chamber to hold a vote soon.

Powell will give his last speech as central bank chair at 2:30 p.m. EST, during which he will likely signal the Federal Reserve's policy should be maintained.

US indices react positively to yet another rumor about the war slowing down, or at least some ability for “wiggle room” in negotiations.

The billionaire investor rang the bell at the New York Stock Exchange Wednesday.

Franco-German tank maker KNDS said on Wednesday it had launched an investigation into a legacy transaction with the Qatar armed forces dating back to 2013, which is being conducted by external legal counsel and advisory firms and includes an assessment of a previous review.

The Bank of Canada kept its main interest rate unchanged at 2.25%, and signaled the rate may stay close to that level so long as the economy evolves as forecast.

Wall Street opened in the red on Wednesday, as investors were cautious ahead of a pivotal Federal Reserve decision and a heavy slate of Big Tech earnings, while keeping a close eye on rising oil prices and geopolitical tensions. The S&P 500 slipped 0.18%, alongside the Dow Jones Industrial Average, which fell 92 points, while the Nasdaq Composite fell by 0.47%.

It's a "monster" day for markets, says Kevin Hincks, pointing to four of the Mag 7 reporting earnings after the closing bell. Not only that, but the Fed's interest rate decision has potential to move markets pending on what Jerome Powell says in his expected final press conference.

I lean toward the view that we are indeed in an AI bubble. The pop is nowhere in sight.

The Federal Reserve's current and future leaders are making consequential appearances in Washington today.

Michael Rosen sees markets in "pretty good shape" right now. Even though higher energy prices hit American checkbooks, he points to rising corporate profits and resilient consumers as key anchors keeping Wall Street tied to the growth story.

An Implan analysis estimates that retirements among older workers are creating a $4.18 billion drag on annual U.S. GDP growth.

Housing starts, a gauge of new residential construction, rose 10.8% in March to 1.502 million.

The stock market rally faces headwinds from surging oil prices and disappointing AI sector momentum, notably impacting Oracle and CoreWeave. Upcoming earnings from Alphabet, Microsoft, Amazon, Meta, and Apple are pivotal, as these firms represent a quarter of S&P 500 value.

Orders for durable goods grew in March, the Commerce Department said, breaking a streak of three straight months of declines.

Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell is now presiding over his final rate-setting meeting, followed by a 2 p.m. ET policy statement and 2:30 p.m. news conference. The biggest question Powell will face, as far as markets are concerned, is whether he will serve out his term as a Fed governor that runs through February 2028.

Corporate profit margins and P/E multiples — not GDP forecasts — are the real tools to surviving a bear market.

David Rubenstein, The Carlyle Group co-founder and co-chairman, joins 'Squawk Box' to discuss the Fed's two-day policy meeting, what to expect from Fed Chair Powell today, his thoughts on Powell's tenure leading the Federal Reserve, and more.

Markets don't just move, they organize. And right now, the tape is telling me a new organizing principle is snapping back into place.