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Instead of retreating to safety, some rookie traders are making even bigger, riskier bets.
Rebecca Feng is a Hong Kong-based reporter for The Wall Street Journal, and covers a broad range of finance, banking and markets stories in the region. She also writes about property, asset ...
the first time it recorded a month-over-month decline since May 2020. The drop was unexpected: Economists surveyed by The Wall Street Journal had forecast a 0.1% rise.
NEW YORK -- Wall Street could soon be in the claws of another bear market as the Trump administration's tariff blitz fuels fears that the added taxes on imported goods from around the world will ...
Wedbush analyst Dan Ives sharpened his criticism of how Elon Musk is running Tesla Inc., saying the electric-vehicle giant’s chief executive needs to make two major moves to stop the stock’s ...
NEW YORK/LONDON (Reuters) - Wall Street bosses are girding for Europe to sideline American investment banks in response to the tariff war unleashed by U.S. President Donald Trump, fearing client ...
(Reuters) - EF Hutton said on Wednesday it is making a comeback to Wall Street, reviving one of the most prominent brands in the brokerage industry. It will be led by CEO Joseph Rallo, who ...
The S&P 500 has delivered a compound annual return of 10.5% since it was established in 1957. However, the index is coming off back-to-back annual gains of more than 25% in 2023 and 2024, which is ...
TEANECK, N.J. (AP) — The losing is over for the baseball teams from Yeshiva University and Lehman College. The teams split a doubleheader Tuesday, with Lehman winning the first game 7-6 to snap ...
So, it’s not like this big collapse. But more importantly, is this panic we’re watching on Wall Street based on hard data or evidence or experience? What do I mean by that? First term ...
Last quarter, McDonald's global same-store sales grew 0.4%, compared to the 0.91% decrease that Wall Street expected. Its US same-store sales were down 1.4% year over year, as an E. coli outbreak ...
“That’s the path we’re on.” Bill Ackman, head of the hedge fund Pershing Square and one of Wall Street’s loudest supporters of Trump, has changed his tune. “We are heading for a self ...