The president may find himself unable to escape responsibility, warned the newspaper’s conservative editorial board.
Shares were mixed in thin Asian trading on Monday after U.S. stocks edged back from their all-time high. Oil prices fell and U.S. futures sank, while Chinese shares shed some of their early gains after a survey of manufacturers showed export orders dropping to a five-month low.
Meta, Apple, Microsoft and Tesla report quarterly results, as analysts start to focus more on AI results. Earnings are also due from Starbucks and Boeing.
What’s better than monthly dividends that add up to 7.2% to 15.4% yearly yields? Cheap monthlies thanks to a high level of fear amongst vanilla investors.
Expect questions about Fed independence at the chairman's Q&A. Apple, Microsoft, Met and Tesla report results. Alphabet may be sitting on an Nvidia rival.
Companies in the S&P 500 appear increasingly focused on tariff policies under President Donald Trump, a point of potential volatility for the U.S. stock market, according to a research note from Citigroup.
Wall Street is pointing slightly lower in early trading but is on track to close the week with solid gains on healthy quarterly earnings reports from large U.S. corporations.
Here’s a surprising new fact about the world’s largest and most-liquid public equity market: Most of the activity on it isn’t public anymore.
Welcome to the Wall Street Week newsletter, bringing you stories of capitalism about things you need to know, but even more things you need to think about. If you’re not yet a subscriber, sign up here for this newsletter.
The fast-growing popularity of the Chinese artificial intelligence software hit shares in tech giants like Nvidia, as Silicon Valley worried about what comes next.
Wall Street tech stocks were headed for a $1tn sell-off on Monday, following advances by Chinese artificial intelligence start-up DeepSeek that raised doubts over whether the US can maintain its lead in AI. Futures linked to the Nasdaq 100 were down 3.9 per cent ahead of the New York open, a move that would wipe $1.04tn from the tech-heavy index.