Coca-Cola was one of several companies whose earnings last week flashed positive signs, despite the hail of uncertainty around tariffs.
Our daily email brings you smart and engaging news and analysis on the biggest stories in business and finance. For free.
Defense stocks are taking up a growing slice of the ESG (environmental, social, governance) pie. Reports attribute that to the war in Ukraine.
Yesterday was Nvidia Day: The AI giant handily beat revenue and profit forecasts, and issued third-quarter guidance that beat expectations.
As the price of franchises soar, shrinking the pool of would-be acquirers, NFL owners are rethinking their aversion to private equity.
Top of the list is a warning over the rise of 24-hour trading, just as the Nasdaq and the New York Stock Exchange pursue it.
Arch Resources and Consol Energy announced plans for a merger to create a new $5.2 billion coal giant called Core Natural Resources.
Wells Fargo said Tuesday that it will sell most of its commercial mortgage servicing business to Trimont, a global loan services provider.
Famed activist investor Carl Icahn agreed to pay $500,000, and his Icahn Enterprises $1.5 million, to settle civil charges from the SEC.
Buffett acolytes are primed to be receptive to new ideas after Berkshire’s more contrarian bets over the last decade have proven prescient.
The Public Company Accounting Oversight Board called out an “unacceptable” level of deficiencies at the country’s biggest auditors.
GoDaddy now sits just outside the top 10 performing companies in year-to-date returns, outpacing everyone in the Mag-7 except for Nvidia.
UBS appears to have regained its form, reporting $1.1 billion in net income for the second quarter, doubling analyst estimates.
When yields rise, it suggests a selloff, and it also means likely higher costs of borrowing for companies as well as the government.
Traders betting against SPY, an exchange traded fund that tracks S&P 500 stocks, racked up more than $6 billion in profits this month.
Jamie Dimon warned inflation is likely going up and Larry Fink said the economy might already be in recession.