Correction notices from MarketWatch

Erroneously published story deleted from MarketWatch site

A third-party news story was inadvertently published Wednesday by MarketWatch under the headline "White House plans to call for more midsized bank regulations, sources say." The story has been deleted. MarketWatch apologiz...

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22 stocks, including Carnival and Zoom, that are down 30% or more from 52-week highs

Other stocks way off their highs include Baidu, Peloton and United Airlines.

Intel’s volatile earnings forecast

A January 22 MarketWatch earnings preview that contained comments about Intel from the firm Bernstein identified the wrong analyst who made the comments.

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Half of investment-grade bonds are only one step away from junk status

Companies binged on cheap credit, and they’re about to pay the price

Here’s what mortgage ‘rate lock’ looks like, in one chart

MarketWatch ran a story on Dec. 10 about the impact of mortgage rates on likelihood to sell based on incorrect data. We have retracted the story.

MarketWatch is committed to correcting errors that appear in our coverage. Messages can be emailed to service@marketwatch.com or by reaching out to those in our newsroom.

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More Correction Notices

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How to build a winning stock portfolio, and seven stocks to get you started

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Breaking up Berkshire Hathaway may be the best idea in a post-Buffett world

The auditor of Citi, Credit Suisse and Deutsche Bank was tipped off before regulatory inspection

An earlier version of this story on June 20 incorrectly identified Air Products and Chemical(TICKER:APD)  as one of the KPMG clients impacted by the actions described. The correct company is Chemical Financial Corporation...

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Companies with women executives can help you do better in the stock market

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Top 10 signs it’s time to sell U.S. stocks

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Why stock-market investors should be worried about the junk-bond market

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Harry Boxer’s three biotech-stock breakouts to watch

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This fund’s managers visit 150 companies a year to double their benchmark’s return

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What investors ought to do after Trump fails to criticize Abe’s policies

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Here’s evidence the Fed is unlikely to raise interest rates before Election Day

Venture capitalist Mike Rothenberg to remain with firm

A report that appeared Aug. 29 on MarketWatch indicated that the 32-year-old venture capitalist Mike Rothenberg was leaving his firm, Rothenberg Ventures. The San Francisco–based firm later characterized the letter to inve...

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Venture capitalist Mike Rothenberg to remain with firm

IEX CEO Katsuyama stands firm on exchange’s fee-only model

A June 21, 2016 story by MarketWatch incorrectly described how the Bats stock exchange charged for services.

Face it: Ted Cruz is as far from the Republican mainstream as Donald Trump is

A column published on April 6 got the name wrong for the fiscal watchdog group, The Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget.

Here’s why the Fed doesn’t know if inflation is a problem

An earlier version of this story misstated the process by which both the consumer price index and the core personal consumption expenditure index are measured.

How a big bet on one bad stock broke a legendary mutual fund

An earlier version of this story, published March 26, misstated the name of Sequoia Fund’s former manager Goldfarb.

Hillary Clinton widens delegate lead even after losing Michigan

A MarketWatch story published Wednesday incorrectly said the Florida and Ohio Democratic presidential primaries are winner-take-all.

Gains in utilities and manufacturing lift industrial output in January

A Feb. 17 story by MarketWatch incorrectly described the downward revision to December industrial output. The story has been corrected.

Karl Marx is the most assigned economist in U.S. college classes

A MarketWatch blog post on Jan. 27 incorrectly stated that the Bible doesn’t appear in the Open Syllabus Project database of U.S. college syllabi.

It may take five years for homeowner equity to return to normal

A story published January 28 incorrectly stated that “seriously underwater” homes have less than 25% equity. Such homes are at least 25% underwater, meaning the outstanding loan is worth at least 25% more than the home’s ...