Coca-Cola was one of several companies whose earnings last week flashed positive signs, despite the hail of uncertainty around tariffs.
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The market appeared yawn-inducing at the broad index level, but there was a flurry of activity under the hood.
The company’s access to a vast well of user payments data could go a long way in creating far more powerful models.
Some glum news from both the PC and semiconductor sector has tech investors feeling a little more cautious.
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.
The chipmaker was flat on Wednesday, and the other 499 stocks in the S&P 500 didn’t have enough oomph to drive the market higher.
The yield curve has now been inverted for around 400 trading sessions, and there’s no recession in sight. So what gives?
Investors are getting activated after a long weekend, but they were still able to push the tech-heavy index to a new peak.
Buffett acolytes are primed to be receptive to new ideas after Berkshire’s more contrarian bets over the last decade have proven prescient.
The 50 companies with the biggest pandemic-era gains have collectively lost $1.5 trillion in market value since the close of 2020.
Just what, exactly, would Sony and Apollo Global Management be getting out of a Paramount Global acquisition?
Despite some business “falling off a cliff” the CEO said other operations “should hopefully grow over time.”
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.