Economist warns Wall Street of big mistake over Trump
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Kraft Heinz is planning a breakup
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Stocks have clawed their way to another record high this week as investors continued to extend increasingly precarious bets on trade.
Wall Street indexes closed higher on Wednesday, led by the tech-heavy Nasdaq as Nvidia briefly reached a $4 trillion valuation, and Federal Reserve meeting minutes fueled hopes that inflation pressures from President Donald Trump's tariffs would not derail interest rate cuts this year.
Discover how Citadel Securities solidifies its dominance in market-making with a key acquisition from Morgan Stanley.
BlackRock, which manages around $10 trillion worth of assets for investors, spearheaded Wall Street’s campaign to bring a long-awaited spot bitcoin ETF to market in 2023, with a fleet of funds debuting in January 2024 that now hold 1.2 million bitcoin worth around $140 billion.
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Alphabet stock has taken a hit this year, but some Wall Street analysts see a buying opportunity.
Asian shares are mixed in cautious trading Friday after Wall Street closed at an all-time high with Delta Air Lines kicking off earnings season with a solid outlook for the rest of 2025, spurring an airline stock rally.
Financial market participants have pushed out yet again the end date for the effort to shrink the size of the Federal Reserve's large balance sheet, the minutes of the U.S. central bank's June 17-18 policy meeting showed on Wednesday.
HSBC Holdings Plc has left the world’s biggest climate alliance for banks, which was rocked earlier this year by an exodus of the biggest lenders in the US.
Stocks are off to a sluggish start on Wall Street, while Delta Air Lines led a rally in airline stocks after releasing a solid outlook for the rest of 2025.
Goldman Sachs led a parade of Wall Street firms boosting their price targets on the biggest AI-focused stocks.
When that happens, Wall Street may see a dramatic resurgence of two types of stocks that have been left on the sidelines recently: small-company stocks and so-called value stocks, meaning the stocks of less glamorous, slower-growing companies that also happen to be reasonably cheap in relation to their earnings, dividends and net assets.