Stock investors are hovering near a make-or-break level in the market
Volatile trading this week as investors react to Trump's tariffs has pushed the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq 100 to an important technical threshold.
Volatile trading this week as investors react to Trump's tariffs has pushed the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq 100 to an important technical threshold.
The NYSE and Cboe have both made similar announcements in recent months, as US exchanges look to enable greater global trading.
The EV Maker's Stock Has Lost Ground Every Week Since President Trump Took Office
The AI chipmaker offered an upbeat second-quarter outlook that was a silver lining in the otherwise downtrodden AI trade.
A solid U.S. jobs report assuaged some swirling concerns about a rapid growth slowdown, but with policy uncertainty surging and tariff headlines keeping the outlook for risk assets murky, Wall Street sees little to cheer. U.S. job growth in February was just shy of estimates and the unemployment rate edged up to 4.1%, but investors were bracing for a more dour outcome after a recent spate of worrisome data. After a punishing selloff in stocks this week, however, markets remained consumed by uncertainty over trade policy and deep federal government spending cuts that could erode the labor market's resilience in the months ahead.
HPE had a rough quarter. Here's what the CEO is doing about it.
Oracle is expected to report fiscal third-quarter results after the market closes Monday, with analysts watching for revenue growth and possible commentary on the company's Stargate joint venture.
A sharp decline for Tesla stock has one of its biggest supporters on Wall Street defending the company as other analysts have tempered their optimism.
(Bloomberg) -- It was the clearest sign yet that, this time around, the “Trump Put” may be little more than wishful thinking.Most Read from BloombergTrump Administration Plans to Eliminate Dozens of Housing OfficesNJ College to Merge With State School After Financial StressRepublican Mayor Braces for Tariffs: ‘We Didn’t Budget for This’How Upzoning in Cambridge Broke the YIMBY MoldNYC’s Finances Are Sinking With Gauge Falling to 11-Year LowAnd the message was delivered by none other than Donald
Deutsche Bank relaunched coverage of the transportation space on Friday with a strong bias toward companies most likely to benefit from a pickup in the industrial economy. The post Deutsche Bank eyes industrial rebound, endorses these transportation stocks appeared first on FreightWaves.