Listen to today’s podcast: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC-nqwUyvLDEvs7bV985k-gQ
Stock Market Daily Podcast — November 24, 2025
Today’s podcast episode was created from the following stories:
Top Wall Street analysts favor these 3 stocks for solid upside potential
By: Not specified • Date: November 23, 2025
Source: Read the original article
Investor sentiment has cooled amid questions around a December rate cut and lofty AI valuations, even as Nvidia’s strong results offered a counterpoint. Despite the caution, top-rated analysts are still highlighting select names with resilient fundamentals and earnings power. The takeaway: stay selective and watch rate expectations as you position for potential upside.
Wall Street IPO market cools as investors grow cautious
By: Not specified • Date: November 23, 2025
Source: Read the original article
The IPO window has slowed following the government shutdown, with an SEC backlog and investor caution pushing many deals into later timelines. While some listings continue—like Central Bancompany’s $373 million raise—others may wait, and recent debuts have struggled as tech-led markets wobble in November. For investors, the pipeline remains active but timing and valuation discipline are front and center.
On-chain stocks could misprice over weekends, triggering arbitrage risks: RedStone
By: Francisco Rodrigues, AI Boost (Edited by Aoyon Ashraf) • Date: November 23, 2025
Source: Read the original article
Tokenized equities can trade 24/7, but oracle price feeds often pause when traditional markets close—creating weekend “price dislocation” risks. RedStone warns that stale data could invite arbitrage and leave lending protocols under-collateralized, advocating more modular, on-demand (“pull”) oracle models. As real-world assets expand on-chain, managing timing mismatches becomes critical for market integrity.
How much is the average 401(k) balance for people in their 60s in 2025?
By: Katharine Paljug • Date: November 23, 2025
Source: Read the original article
The average 401(k) balance for people in their 60s is $568,040, but the median is a much lower $188,792—highlighting wide disparities. Rules of thumb like the 4% rule and catch-up contributions can guide planning, but needs vary based on lifestyle, timing, and other income sources such as Social Security. The message: focus on personalized targets and late-stage strategies to close any gaps.

