The Treasury kept its guidance suggesting the sales of long-term debt will remain unchanged through much of 2025.
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President Donald Trump said on Tuesday that he wants Ukraine to supply rare earth to the US in exchange for continued military aid.
As they say: Man plans, and Mother Nature floods his semi-basement. And climate change may melt home values along with glaciers.
Markets, which began the day in an initial panic as Trump promised tariffs, recovered to a more cautionary footing.
Just six years after Trump 1.0 signed a new trade agreement with Mexico and Canada, Trump 2.0 is imposing tariffs on goods from them.
Americans make about 150 million trips to emergency departments each year. Their bank accounts wish they made far fewer.
The alternative investment giant may be on the verge of its first New York office building transaction in nearly three years.
If economists are professionals who are paid to make incorrect guesses, as the old joke goes, then they’re certainly earning their keep.
Sales of new homes picked up considerably to end 2024. But sales of old homes are at their slowest pace since 1995.
Remember “quiet quitting?” The pandemic-era buzzword may have faded but the quiet quitters haven’t exactly quit quiet quitting.
When the Federal Reserve meets again next week, it’s all but certain to hold interest rates steady. What happens after that? Well…
$1 trillion would be a tall order even for bin Salman, whose kingdom faces a set of steep economic hurdles that aren’t getting any lower.
The Trump 2.0 era may have officially begun this week, but the much-hyped tariff-fueled trade war has not. At least, not yet.
The EU wants everyone to know it has no intention of genuflecting toward a new Trump administration and won’t stop doling out Big Tech fines.
Another month, another Consumer Price Index inflation report, the show-stopping data dump of our inflation-weary universe.
The focus will be on mining earth metals including lithium, zinc, copper and nickel, all crucial metals for battery-making.