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NYSE:AAP 9 December 2025 - 26 December 2025

Advance Auto Parts (AAP) Stock Today: Live Price, Latest News, Analyst Forecasts, and What Investors Are Watching on Wall Street

Advance Auto Parts (AAP) Stock Today: Live Price, Latest News, Analyst Forecasts, and What Investors Are Watching on Wall Street

Advance Auto Parts traded near $41.04, down 0.2% by 10:13 a.m. ET Friday in New York, amid thin post-holiday volume. The company recently sold its Worldpac unit to Carlyle for $1.5 billion and is restructuring, including plans to close about 500 stores. The S&P 500 hovered near record highs as investors awaited Fed minutes. Competitors AutoZone, O’Reilly, and Genuine Parts also traded steady.
26 December 2025
Advance Auto Parts Stock (NYSE: AAP) on Dec. 24, 2025: Latest News, Turnaround Forecasts, and Analyst Outlook

Advance Auto Parts Stock (NYSE: AAP) on Dec. 24, 2025: Latest News, Turnaround Forecasts, and Analyst Outlook

Advance Auto Parts traded around $40–$41 on Dec. 24 after a volatile month, rebounding from recent lows. The company named Ronald Gilbert as Senior Vice President of Supply Chain, effective Dec. 22. Shares remain far below the 52-week high, with investors watching turnaround efforts and sector pricing pressures. A $0.25 quarterly dividend was declared, payable Jan. 23, 2026.
24 December 2025
Biggest Stock Losers Today in the U.S. (Dec. 10, 2025): DYN, SLM, KTB, WAY and More Slide as Fed Decision Looms

Biggest Stock Losers Today in the U.S. (Dec. 10, 2025): DYN, SLM, KTB, WAY and More Slide as Fed Decision Looms

Dyne Therapeutics shares fell 16.9% to $18.44 after announcing a $300 million stock offering. SLM Corp dropped 15%, Kontoor Brands slid 9.5%, and Waystar Holding lost 8.4%. Major indexes were little changed as investors awaited the Federal Reserve’s interest-rate decision. The U.S. 10-year Treasury yield hovered near 4.19%.

Stock Market Today

  • IMF Research Questions Bonds as Safe Havens in Stock Market Crashes, Suggests Commodities ETFs
    June 28, 2026, 10:12 PM EDT. Recent IMF research reveals that bonds may no longer serve as reliable diversifiers during stock market downturns due to increased positive correlation with stocks since 2019. Traditional wisdom that bonds rise when stocks fall is challenged. Instead, adding commodities like precious metals could offer better portfolio protection. ETFs such as iShares Silver Trust (SLV), which tracks silver bullion and has returned 21.75% annually over five years, and VanEck Rare Earth and Strategic Metals ETF (REMX) provide exposure to these assets. Silver's sharp 147.9% gain in 2025 reflects inflation concerns and industrial demand but also comes with volatility, having dropped 50% since its January peak. Investors should weigh risks carefully when seeking diversification beyond stocks and bonds.

Latest articles

Trump-era loan caps could open door for private lenders in grad school market

Trump-era loan caps could open door for private lenders in grad school market

29 June 2026
July 1 federal loan caps slash Grad PLUS access, forcing many graduate and professional students to seek private loans; Sallie Mae projects up to 70% origination growth over several years, while SoFi reports record student-loan volume—investors now face a real-time test of how much demand shifts to private lenders as federal limits hit.
IREN Limited (NASDAQ:IREN) slides as Warriors badge faces AI revenue test

IREN Limited (NASDAQ:IREN) slides as Warriors badge faces AI revenue test

29 June 2026
IREN Limited (NASDAQ:IREN) plunged 21.3% to $47.21 over five straight down days despite announcing a record $50M+ annual Warriors jersey deal, as investors focused on the company’s not fully contracted $4.4B target ARR and high short interest at 19.74% of float, with Friday’s close near the lowest analyst target.
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