Best Stock Market Performance as of October 29, 2025
- Hong Kong soars: Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index has surged roughly 35% year-to-date, making it the world’s top-performing major market as of late October [1].
- Global records: Japan’s Nikkei 225 just broke 50,000 for the first time (YTD +26.6%), while U.S. benchmarks like the S&P 500 and Dow Jones hover at record highs [2] [3].
- Tech-powered gains: A worldwide AI boom is propelling tech-heavy indices – the Nasdaq-100 is up ~19% in 2025 [4] – and fueling huge rallies in semiconductor and cloud stocks. Mega-cap “Magnificent Seven” tech companies added trillions in value, with Nvidia briefly the world’s most valuable firm amid chip euphoria [5].
- Sector standouts: Beyond tech, banks and industrials are climbing on economic optimism (Eurozone bank stocks +35% YTD) [6], and even healthcare has stars – e.g. Eli Lilly hit record highs (~$935) on booming demand for obesity drugs [7].
- What’s next: Analysts cite cooling inflation and rate cuts as tailwinds, but warn of bubble risks. The Fed is widely expected to ease policy further, boosting growth stocks [8], yet top investors like JPMorgan’s Jamie Dimon caution parts of Big Tech look “bubble-like” with correction risks [9].
Global Markets Rally to New Highs
Stock markets around the world are on fire heading into the final days of October 2025. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index – up about 34–35% so far this year – is the planet’s best-performing major index [10]. After a brutal multi-year slump, Hong Kong’s market came roaring back thanks to ultra-cheap valuations and China’s post-pandemic stimulus. Investors flooded into undervalued Chinese tech and consumer stocks, driving a dramatic rebound. As a result, the Hang Seng has erased its losses from prior years and is flirting with three-year highs [11] [12]. “The market was clearly undervalued… confidence returned, money flowed in again,” one Hong Kong analyst noted of 2025’s turnaround [13]. A series of catalysts fueled the surge – from Beijing’s big economic stimulus packages to breakthroughs in Chinese AI technology and blockbuster movie releases energizing consumer sentiment [14] [15]. Even a mid-October trade scare (when a fresh U.S. tariff salvo briefly spooked markets) barely dented the momentum – the Hang Seng Volatility Index spiked, but investors quickly bought the dip, betting that U.S.-China tensions would ease [16] [17]. As of this week, Hong Kong stocks remain on a tear, buoyed by renewed trade-deal hopes and expectations of further Chinese policy support. The Hang Seng’s resilience – up ~30%+ in 2025 despite geopolitical jitters – underscores the return of global risk appetite [18] [19].
In Japan, the rally has been equally historic. On Monday, the Nikkei 225 index blasted through the 50,000 mark for the first time ever, capping a run of successive record highs [20]. The blue-chip Nikkei is now +26.6% in 2025 [21], a stunning turnaround for a market that spent decades in the doldrums. Fueling Tokyo’s surge are hopes for massive government spending under new Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi – a noted fiscal dove – and relief over a new U.S.-Japan trade deal that slashed tariffs on Japanese exports [22] [23]. “The leadership change has given a lot more confidence… you can see more stability, and the markets have rocketed from that,” said John Pearce, chief investment officer at Australia’s UniSuper, explaining the Nikkei’s rally [24] [25]. Japan’s market gains have been broad-based: a weaker yen and trade peace boosted exporters, chipmakers like Advantest jumped 6%+ on AI optimism, and financial firms are climbing on hopes the Bank of Japan may finally normalize policy [26] [27]. Notably, SoftBank Group – a major tech investor – surged ~6.7% this week, giving the Nikkei one of its biggest boosts as traders pile into anything tied to the AI boom [28]. The fact that Japan’s index took 34 years (until 2024) to reclaim its late-1980s bubble peak, only to smash through that ceiling now, highlights how extraordinary 2025’s bull market has become [29] [30].
European stocks have quietly joined the party as well. The pan-European STOXX 600 index hit all-time highs this month [31], and many regional bourses are outperforming even Wall Street. In fact, several smaller European markets are 2025’s surprise stars – Greece, Poland, the Czech Republic, Spain and others have posted year-to-date gains in the high 20s (%), leading the world in equity returns [32]. For example, Poland’s main WIG index has soared ~28.6% since January, outpacing most global markets [33]. European equities caught a turbocharge early in the year from fading recession fears and a one-off German fiscal boost. Domestic-focused companies – especially banks and utilities – took off, helped by rising interest rates and government spending plans [34] [35]. By mid-year, Eurozone bank stocks had skyrocketed ~35%, and even with recent cooling, Europe’s financials and industrials remain among 2025’s top sectors [36] [37]. For instance, Germany’s DAX and France’s CAC 40 are up solidly double-digits, while Greece’s Athens index and Poland’s WIG have rallied ~25–30%, bolstered by rebounding local economies and, in Poland’s case, hopes for geopolitical stability in Eastern Europe [38]. As of October, European shares are trading near record levels, buoyed by robust corporate earnings and optimism that central banks will soon ease up. “Prospects of softer monetary policy by the Fed have been the latest catalyst for European stocks,” Reuters noted after the STOXX notched new highs, with rate-sensitive sectors leading the charge [39]. Even a brief wobble over a U.S. government shutdown couldn’t derail Europe’s rally, which logged its best month in years this fall on the back of cooling inflation and chip-stock strength [40] [41].
Meanwhile, U.S. markets – the world’s largest – are climbing from record to record. The benchmark S&P 500 index is up roughly 14–15% in 2025 (and made fresh all-time highs this month), while the Dow Jones Industrial Average just hit a record ~47,000 [42] [43]. The rally in U.S. equities, which began in late 2024, kicked into higher gear this year thanks to a phenomenal run in tech megacaps and improving macroeconomic signals. As of this week, the Dow is hovering near peak levels (~46,925) and the S&P is at ~6,900 points [44] – remarkable milestones fueled by stronger-than-expected corporate profits. Wall Street’s third-quarter earnings season has delivered upside surprises from Old Economy stalwarts (from Coca-Cola to 3M), affirming that consumer spending and manufacturing remain resilient [45]. In fact, 87% of S&P companies reporting so far beat forecasts, and analysts now peg Q3 earnings growth around +9.2% – the fastest in many quarters [46] [47]. Those solid results “provide stock investors with relief at a time the rally is slowing,” noted Bloomberg Intelligence, suggesting fundamental support for the market’s gains [48]. At the same time, cooling U.S. inflation has traders convinced the Federal Reserve will start cutting interest rates – a major positive for stocks. Yields on government bonds have eased from their highs, taking pressure off interest-sensitive sectors. Indeed, futures markets now price in two more Fed rate cuts by year-end [49]. After the Fed’s aggressive tightening last year, the pivot to easier policy is a sea change: “a major tailwind for equities, especially growth stocks,” as Reuters observed [50]. This policy optimism, combined with hopes for a U.S.-China trade truce, injected fresh adrenaline into markets in recent days. Just this week, news broke that President Donald Trump will meet China’s President Xi Jinping to discuss a trade framework – a development that provided “rocket fuel” for global stocks [51]. Shares of U.S.-listed Chinese tech giants like Alibaba and Baidu leapt 3–5% on the headlines [52], and the Philadelphia Semiconductor Index hit new peaks as investors cheered any hint of reduced tariffs [53]. With both monetary policy and trade winds shifting in a friendlier direction, it’s no surprise that risk assets worldwide are rallying. The market’s fear gauge (VIX volatility index) recently sank to one-month lows as investor sentiment turned upbeat [54]. “Clearly the progress on U.S.-China negotiations boosted sentiment,” analysts noted, adding that an imminent Fed rate cut has “put the wind at the market’s back” [55].
Tech and AI Boom Lead the Charge
Across virtually all regions, technology stocks have been the driving force behind 2025’s market boom. The excitement around artificial intelligence (AI) – from machine learning to chip innovation – has triggered a massive re-rating of tech companies globally. The result: a trillion-dollar surge in market values concentrated in the biggest tech names. In the U.S., the seven superstar tech firms dubbed the “Magnificent Seven” (Apple, Microsoft, Amazon, Alphabet/Google, Meta, Tesla, and Nvidia) have seen their combined market capitalization swell to an astonishing $12–13 trillion [56]. Since late 2022 – when OpenAI’s ChatGPT burst onto the scene – those few stocks alone have added roughly $6 trillion in value [57]. They now comprise over one-third of the entire S&P 500’s worth [58], an unprecedented concentration of market power. The tech-heavy Nasdaq has massively outpaced broader indexes as a result – the Nasdaq-100 is +19% year-to-date, roughly double the S&P’s gain [59]. This AI boom is truly global: Chinese and Asian tech shares are also on fire. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Tech Index has rocketed +46% in 2025 [60], far outstripping older-economy sectors, thanks to policy support for chipmakers and frantic AI investment by China’s internet giants [61]. Korea’s Samsung and SK Hynix, two of the world’s biggest memory chip makers, just inked high-profile deals to supply AI data centers – news that sent European semiconductor stocks like ASML up 4–6% and helped push the Netherlands’ AEX index to a record high [62] [63]. From Asia to America, semiconductor companies have become market darlings as investors bet the AI revolution will require endless silicon. The Philadelphia SEMI index is at all-time highs [64], and chipmakers are posting eye-popping gains: Nvidia (NVDA) – the global leader in AI graphics processors – saw its stock more than double at one point this year, briefly making Nvidia the world’s most valuable company by market cap (even surpassing Apple) [65]. AMD, Nvidia’s chief rival, isn’t far behind – AMD shares have soared ~80% in 2025 to record highs after the company won a blockbuster AI chip partnership with OpenAI [66]. The AI frenzy has even lifted lesser-known tech names into the stratosphere: for instance, Palantir Technologies – an AI-driven data analytics firm – has seen its stock skyrocket ~300% this year, hitting record highs near $190/share (a ~$400 billion valuation) [67]. Palantir’s string of mega-deals (from a $10 B Army contract to partnerships with Boeing and others) underscored booming demand for its AI platforms, making it one of 2025’s top-performing S&P 500 stocks [68] [69]. “Enthusiasm for artificial intelligence extends to data-focused stocks like Palantir,” Reuters noted amid the rally, as investors chase anything perceived as an “AI winner” [70] [71].
Crucially, it’s not just pure tech companies riding this wave. The AI revolution has cast a halo over multiple sectors. In Big Tech, almost every titan has hit new heights. Apple is flirting with an unprecedented $4 trillion market cap after its stock jumped to record levels on strong iPhone 17 sales and investor excitement about Apple’s AI and hardware ecosystem [72]. Microsoft is near all-time highs (~$514/share) after posting 18% sales growth last quarter, powered by “booming cloud/AI demand” for its Azure platform [73] [74]. Wall Street is overwhelmingly bullish – 32 of 34 analysts rate Microsoft a buy, and Wedbush’s Dan Ives even sees it on track for a $5 trillion valuation as its AI push accelerates [75]. Alphabet (Google), similarly, has surged about 30% YTD, reaching record territory behind a rebound in ad revenues and big strides in Google’s AI ventures [76]. Even Meta (Facebook), after a disastrous 2022, has made a +25% comeback this year [77], fueled by a return to double-digit growth in its ad business and heavy investments in AI-driven features. The story is similar in Asia: Taiwan’s TSMC and Japan’s tech conglomerates have climbed as they ride the AI hardware demand, and Chinese internet giants like Tencent and Alibaba (which trade in Hong Kong) are up sharply from 2022 lows as China’s own AI startups gain traction [78] [79].
Beyond technology, other sectors are contributing to the 2025 rally – albeit to a lesser degree. Industrials and consumer discretionary stocks have been strong, reflecting confidence in ongoing economic growth. In Europe, industrials are among the top performers this year [80], and in the U.S., cyclical names have led on days when tech takes a breather [81] [82]. For example, shares of General Motors popped nearly 15% in one day after a solid earnings report and upbeat outlook [83]. Luxury auto makers like Ferrari also saw spikes (Ferrari +2.7% on an analyst upgrade) as high-end consumer demand stays robust [84] [85]. The banking sector has enjoyed a revival, particularly in Europe and emerging markets. As noted, Eurozone bank indexes are up ~35% this year [86], boosted by higher interest rates (which improve lending margins) and the rotation into value stocks. In Asia, Japanese banks have climbed on speculation the BOJ will raise rates, and Hong Kong financials rallied as the local economy stabilized. Meanwhile in the U.S., big banks have lagged tech but are still positive for the year, and investment banks benefited from the rush of tech IPOs and deals in the AI space. Healthcare delivered one of the year’s standout stock stories: Eli Lilly saw its shares vault to all-time highs (nearly $940) after its new class of obesity/diabetes drugs achieved explosive sales [87]. Lilly’s market cap now exceeds $880 billion, and analysts still see 15–20% upside as the weight-loss drug market booms [88]. On the flip side, some defensive sectors have lagged – utilities and staples barely eked out gains as investors rotated into riskier plays [89]. And safe havens have slumped: after spiking to record levels earlier this year, gold prices plunged ~5% in late October as traders ditched defensive assets in favor of stocks [90]. Even bonds saw outflows until recently, underscoring how “risk-on” the market mood has become.
Analyst Insights – Optimism vs. Bubble Warnings
With markets in overdrive, financial experts are divided on how much higher stocks can go. Many analysts remain bullish, pointing to strengthening earnings and the prospect of easier central banks as justification for the rally. “I see further room for the rally to run, judging from the breadth in the tech rally,” said Lale Akoner, a global market strategist at eToro [91]. She noted that it’s not only the mega-cap tech leaders rising, but “the average tech stock” is now participating, suggesting a healthier, broad-based upswing [92]. Indeed, market breadth has improved since earlier in the year – for example, over half the S&P 500’s components are in technical uptrends now, versus just a handful of names driving gains in mid-2025. Bulls argue that as long as economic growth persists and interest rates retreat, stocks have a solid foundation to climb further. The fact that companies are delivering strong results (with revenues and profits topping forecasts) “lowers the bar” for continued market strength, one strategist explained [93]. And importantly, central banks are shifting to support growth. In the U.S., the Federal Reserve on Oct. 29 approved its first interest rate cut of 2025 – a 0.25% trim – after inflation slowed to ~3%. Fed Chair Jerome Powell struck a more dovish tone, and markets are betting on another cut in December [94]. “A December rate cut now also looks likely,” noted Ryan Detrick of Carson Group, adding that cooling inflation “opened the door” for the Fed’s policy reversal [95]. This Fed pivot is a game-changer for high-valuation growth stocks that were pressured by last year’s rate hikes. Similarly, China’s central bank has been easing policy to spur its recovery, and even Europe’s ECB has hinted at rate relief in 2026 if price pressures keep abating. Lower rates act like rocket fuel for equities by making bonds less attractive and reducing corporate borrowing costs. As such, many investment banks have raised their year-end targets for major indices. For instance, Goldman Sachs now sees the S&P 500 ending 2025 above 7,000, citing the Fed’s supportive turn and robust tech earnings (though Goldman also cautioned volatility will tick up). Some analysts even see room for rotation into laggard areas. “If we get resolution on tariffs and a leveling out of the dollar, I think exporters and value stocks will start to perform – that could be the second leg of the rally,” BlackRock’s Helen Jewell observed, regarding Europe’s outlook [96] [97]. This view suggests that 2025’s rally could broaden beyond AI-driven names if macro uncertainties (trade, dollar strength) clear up.
However, a growing chorus of market veterans warn that euphoria is setting in – and that significant risks loom on the horizon. They point out that valuations are extremely stretched by historical standards. U.S. stocks now trade around 20× forward earnings, near their highest multiple in two decades [98]. In pockets of the tech sector, the price-tags have become downright extreme: Nvidia is about 50× earnings; upstart AI firms often have no earnings at all; and as one analyst wryly noted, Palantir at $400 billion is valued “at one of the most expensive multiples in modern market history” [99] [100]. “Investors are essentially pricing in perfection,” the TS² financial site noted, warning of bubble concerns if the AI hype fades [101]. Top investors have also voiced unease. OpenAI CEO Sam Altman, Amazon founder Jeff Bezos, and Goldman Sachs’s David Solomon are among those publicly cautioning that tech stock prices may be running far ahead of fundamentals [102]. Perhaps the starkest warning came from JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon, who said recently he is “far more worried” about speculative excess now than earlier in the cycle [103]. Parts of Big Tech “look ‘bubble-like’” and could see a “significant correction” if earnings don’t eventually justify the hype, Dimon warned [104]. Even some Fed officials have hinted at concern that asset prices are getting frothy. This skepticism is not without basis: memories of the late-1990s dot-com bubble linger, with some comparisons hard to ignore. Back then, a handful of tech stocks soared to unsustainable heights on transformative promises (the internet!), only to crash back to earth. Today, AI is the transformative promise – and while it could revolutionize industries, skeptics note that many AI investments have yet to produce tangible profits [105]. A widely cited MIT study found only ~5% of corporate AI projects showed measurable benefits, indicating much of the frenzy may be premature [106]. “Overall, the models are not there,” OpenAI co-founder Andrej Karpathy said, calling much of today’s AI enthusiasm “misguided ‘slop’” rather than solid progress [107]. If the real-world payoff of AI disappoints, the argument goes, AI-centric stocks could be in for harsh reality checks.
Market strategists are thus urging some caution even as indexes hit new highs. One noted that with major indexes hovering at records and valuations stretched, “even upbeat results could prove insufficient to sustain risk appetite” – meaning any slip-up in earnings or economic data might swiftly sour sentiment [108]. That dynamic was on display when Netflix missed its quarterly earnings in October: despite an overall bull market, Netflix stock plunged ~7%, and the news “put a slight chill” on Nasdaq futures the next day [109]. Similarly, Tesla – which had run up in anticipation of strong AI and self-driving updates – saw its stock wobble when its EV profit margins came in thin, reminding traders that fundamentals still matter. Volatility, in short, remains a lingering risk. Any hint of the post-pandemic economic boom faltering (for instance, a weak jobs report or a resurgence of inflation) could jolt markets that have priced in perfection. Geopolitics is another wild card: the Middle East conflict and European security tensions have kept oil and defense markets on edge [110], and a flare-up or new crisis could quickly send investors back into safe havens. “The market is on tenterhooks and very fragile at the moment,” said Oriano Lizza of CMC Markets, referring to how headlines around U.S.-China trade in October whipsawed Chinese stocks [111] [112]. In summary, optimism reigns, but nerves haven’t vanished. Traders are toggling between greed and caution – embracing the upside of an AI-fueled economy, yet mindful that expectations are sky-high.
Outlook: Can the Rally Sustain Into 2026?
Going forward, investors are intensely debating what comes next after this remarkable run. In the near term, many market-watchers believe the path of least resistance is still upward, albeit with possible bumps. The combination of robust earnings, declining inflation, and a more dovish Fed provides a supportive backdrop for equities as 2025 winds down [113]. “For now, the combination of robust earnings, potential Fed rate cuts, and ebbing inflation is a constructive backdrop for stocks,” as analysts at Bloomberg Intelligence summed it up [114]. The consensus on Wall Street is that the U.S. economy will avoid recession through at least mid-2026, growing modestly, which could further underpin corporate profits. Likewise, Europe’s growth – while slower – is expected to stabilize with help from government spending (e.g. Germany’s new fiscal programs [115]). China’s economy, which stumbled early in 2025, shows signs of bottoming out; if Beijing rolls out additional stimulus or housing market support, it could prolong the rally in Hong Kong and emerging markets. In fact, emerging market stocks broadly have outperformed developed markets this year [116] [117]. Should the U.S. and China finalize a trade truce (possibly at the upcoming APEC summit), it would remove a major overhang and could spark another leg up for trade-sensitive stocks worldwide [118].
However, the key question is whether the market’s leadership will broaden or falter. One hopeful scenario: sector rotation and new market drivers take the baton in 2026, allowing the rally to continue even if the AI trade cools. Already, there are hints of rotation – for instance, late in October, cyclical stocks in the industrial and consumer sectors led gains while the high-flying Nasdaq paused [119]. If inflation keeps receding and rates fall, sectors like housing, utilities, and small-caps (which lagged in 2025) could catch up. Additionally, international equities might start to shine relative to U.S. tech: Japan’s market has shown it can rally on domestic policy change, and some strategists see undervalued European stocks as ripe for a catch-up, especially if the euro strengthens less or Chinese demand picks up [120] [121]. On the other hand, a less rosy scenario would be if the current winners simply run out of steam. If corporate earnings in 2026 fail to meet lofty growth expectations, or if the Fed unexpectedly shifts back to a hawkish stance (for example, if inflation flares up from oil prices or wage gains), stocks could face a reckoning. Valuation gravity tends to reassert itself eventually – the unknown is when. Some veteran traders suspect a short-term pullback or correction could hit in early 2026 once the adrenaline of Fed cuts is fully priced in. “Sentiment can turn on a dime,” one portfolio manager cautioned, noting how quickly this year’s Fed tariff announcement in April sent stocks swooning before they recovered [122].
For now, though, the bulls have the upper hand. Markets are climbing a classic “wall of worry,” proving resilient in the face of every mini-scare. Dips have consistently been bought, and there’s ample liquidity on the sidelines – both institutional and retail investors – eager to jump in on any weakness. Even skeptics concede that missing out on this rally has been painful, which creates a FOMO (fear of missing out) dynamic that itself can keep propelling prices higher. “Any correction would give long-term investors a chance to buy at lower prices,” advised China Merchants Securities in a recent note, suggesting that pullbacks in China’s markets should be viewed as opportunities, not panics [123] [124]. That mindset – buy the dip – is prevalent across markets today.
Bottom line: As of October 29, 2025, the global stock bull market is alive and kicking, led by a scorching rally in Hong Kong that has made it the world’s top performer. Major indices from New York to Tokyo are hitting records, powered by technological transformation and renewed policy support. The final stretch of 2025 is set to be eventful – with a Fed meeting, key earnings, and a high-stakes U.S.-China summit all on tap – but momentum remains strong. Investors will be watching whether the AI-driven exuberance can transition into tangible growth to justify lofty valuations. If it can, stocks may have further to climb in 2026. But if not, markets may be in for a reality check. For now, though, the bulls are in charge – and anyone who bet on the world’s hottest stock market (Hong Kong) or the AI “magnificent seven” has a lot to celebrate as 2025 winds down [125] [126].
Sources: Financial Times, Reuters, TechStock² (ts2.tech), Advisor Perspectives, Bloomberg, J.P. Morgan Asset Management, Intellinews [127] [128] [129] [130] [131] [132] [133] [134] [135] [136]
References
1. www.advisorperspectives.com, 2. www.reuters.com, 3. ts2.tech, 4. ts2.tech, 5. ts2.tech, 6. www.reuters.com, 7. ts2.tech, 8. ts2.tech, 9. ts2.tech, 10. www.advisorperspectives.com, 11. www.dividendtitan.com, 12. www.dividendtitan.com, 13. www.dividendtitan.com, 14. www.dividendtitan.com, 15. www.dividendtitan.com, 16. www.reuters.com, 17. www.reuters.com, 18. www.reuters.com, 19. www.reuters.com, 20. www.reuters.com, 21. www.reuters.com, 22. www.blackwellglobal.com, 23. www.reuters.com, 24. www.reuters.com, 25. www.reuters.com, 26. www.reuters.com, 27. www.reuters.com, 28. www.reuters.com, 29. www.reuters.com, 30. www.reuters.com, 31. www.reuters.com, 32. www.forbes.com, 33. www.intellinews.com, 34. www.reuters.com, 35. www.reuters.com, 36. www.reuters.com, 37. www.reuters.com, 38. www.intellinews.com, 39. www.reuters.com, 40. www.reuters.com, 41. www.reuters.com, 42. www.reuters.com, 43. ts2.tech, 44. ts2.tech, 45. ts2.tech, 46. ts2.tech, 47. ts2.tech, 48. ts2.tech, 49. ts2.tech, 50. ts2.tech, 51. ts2.tech, 52. ts2.tech, 53. ts2.tech, 54. ts2.tech, 55. ts2.tech, 56. ts2.tech, 57. ts2.tech, 58. ts2.tech, 59. ts2.tech, 60. am.jpmorgan.com, 61. am.jpmorgan.com, 62. www.reuters.com, 63. www.reuters.com, 64. ts2.tech, 65. ts2.tech, 66. ts2.tech, 67. ts2.tech, 68. ts2.tech, 69. ts2.tech, 70. ts2.tech, 71. ts2.tech, 72. ts2.tech, 73. ts2.tech, 74. ts2.tech, 75. ts2.tech, 76. ts2.tech, 77. ts2.tech, 78. www.dividendtitan.com, 79. www.dividendtitan.com, 80. www.reuters.com, 81. ts2.tech, 82. ts2.tech, 83. ts2.tech, 84. www.reuters.com, 85. www.reuters.com, 86. www.reuters.com, 87. ts2.tech, 88. ts2.tech, 89. ts2.tech, 90. ts2.tech, 91. www.reuters.com, 92. www.reuters.com, 93. ts2.tech, 94. ts2.tech, 95. ts2.tech, 96. www.reuters.com, 97. www.reuters.com, 98. ts2.tech, 99. ts2.tech, 100. ts2.tech, 101. ts2.tech, 102. ts2.tech, 103. ts2.tech, 104. ts2.tech, 105. ts2.tech, 106. ts2.tech, 107. ts2.tech, 108. ts2.tech, 109. ts2.tech, 110. ts2.tech, 111. www.reuters.com, 112. www.reuters.com, 113. ts2.tech, 114. ts2.tech, 115. www.reuters.com, 116. am.jpmorgan.com, 117. am.jpmorgan.com, 118. www.reuters.com, 119. ts2.tech, 120. www.reuters.com, 121. www.reuters.com, 122. www.reuters.com, 123. www.reuters.com, 124. www.reuters.com, 125. www.advisorperspectives.com, 126. ts2.tech, 127. www.advisorperspectives.com, 128. www.reuters.com, 129. ts2.tech, 130. www.reuters.com, 131. ts2.tech, 132. ts2.tech, 133. www.reuters.com, 134. ts2.tech, 135. ts2.tech, 136. www.intellinews.com