Insiders stepped up to buy millions of dollars in these stocks in the past week

Several executives committed their own personal money to buying their company’s stock this week.
PGA Tour, TGL assessing timeline for Tiger Woods’ new golf league after dome collapse

TGL’s Florida dome venue suffered damage earlier this week, potentially threatening the January launch of the Tiger Woods-backed league.
A diamond engagement ring is an ‘emotional purchase,’ analyst says. Here’s what to know about man-made vs. natural gems

Lab-grown diamonds have had an increased demand because of their similarity to natural diamonds. Experts, however, warn that their value may decline rapidly.
Black Friday came early this year, signaling worries about holiday demand

Both the depth of discounts and the total amount of items on sale were higher in October compared to the past four years.
The market is entering deep overbought territory, and these stocks could be due for a pullback

CNBC Pro used FactSet data to screen for the most overbought and oversold names in the S&P 500 based on their 14-day relative strength index, or RSI.
Stocks making the biggest moves midday: Gap, Ross Stores, Tenet Healthcare and more

These are the stocks posting the largest moves in midday trading.
Want a brilliant business idea? Stop waiting for a ‘lightbulb moment,’ say authors who interviewed 18 Harvard startup founders

The idea that a great business idea will suddenly pop into your head is a total myth, say authors and investors Catalina Daniels and James Sherman. Here’s why.
U.S. crude oil fell into a bear market this week and could head lower as China ‘haunts the market’

The bearish narrative is driven by worries that supply is increasing as demand threatens to slow in the U.S. and China.
Ford union workers ratify UAW deal, closing out historic negotiations with Detroit automakers

A majority of Ford facilities overwhelmingly approved the deal, which, like GM and Stellantis, includes at least 25% wage increases.
Thousands of Chinese nationals, gotaways at the southern border since Oct 1: sources

Thousands of Chinese nationals have hit the southern border since the beginning of the fiscal year, along with hundreds of Afghans and other nationalities, while there have been thousands of “gotaways” who have evaded Border Patrol – as the U.S. tackles a migrant crisis that is global in scope and has renewed national security concerns. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) sources told Fox News that since Oct. 1 there were over 6,500 Chinese nationals encountered at the U.S.-Mexico border, along with over 700 Afghans. There were over 140 encounters from Syria, over 80 from Iran and over 1,500 from Uzbekistan, the sources said. FOX NEWS FOOTAGE SHOWS RELEASE OF CHINESE NATIONALS INTO US AMID MASSIVE SPIKE IN ENCOUNTERS Meanwhile, for the month of October, there were on average just over 1,000 “gotaways” a day – meaning migrants who evaded Border Patrol apprehension but who were caught on alternative forms of detection. DHS Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas told lawmakers earlier this month that there had been approximately 600,000 gotaways in FY 23. There were more than 249,000 migrants encounters in October, and the arrival of migrants not only from countries in the Western Hemisphere but also from China — a top geopolitical foe of the U.S. – as well as “special interest” countries in the Middle East and elsewhere have raised concerns about the potential national security threat that could be arriving in the wake of the terror attack on Israel. DHS said that it “is and always will work tirelessly to screen, vet, and prevent anyone who poses a threat from entering the country” and says that those screening efforts include biographic and biometric screening. “Our multilayered border security efforts include various screening and vetting processes that work to detect and prevent individuals who pose national security or public safety risks from entering the United States,” an official said. FBI DIRECTOR WRAY SAYS BORDER GOTAWAYS A SOURCE OF ‘GREAT CONCERN’ FOR AGENCY On getaways, officials have stressed that apprehension rates have remained roughly the same to the average from the prior administration, and there is greater situational awareness of the border now due to increased technology. At the same time, officials have acknowledged a security risk at the border. FBI Director Christopher Wray was quizzed on the numbers of gotaways at a House hearing this week and said it was a source of “great concern” to the agency. “Well, certainly the group of people that you’re talking about are source of great concern for us. That’s why we’re aggressively using all 56 of our joint terrorism task forces,” Wray said. FBI DIRECTOR WRAY WARNS TERROR THREAT TO AMERICANS AT ‘WHOLE OTHER LEVEL’ AMID HAMAS-ISRAEL CONFLICT He later said that “any time you have a group of people in the United States that we don’t know nearly enough about, that is a source of concern for us from a perspective in our lane of protecting Americans.” He later said “the threats that come from the other side of the border are very much consuming all 56 of our field offices, not just in the border states.” The Department of Homeland Security’s FY 24 threat assessment warned that agents have encountered a growing number on the watch list and warned that “terrorists and criminal actors may exploit the elevated flow and increasingly complex security environment to enter the United States.” “Individuals with terrorism connections are interested in using established travel routes and permissive environments to facilitate access to the United States,” the assessment also said.