President Donald Trump said on Tuesday that he wants Ukraine to supply rare earth to the US in exchange for continued military aid.
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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 US is the WHO’s biggest donor, chipping in roughly 18% of the organization’s $2 billion to $3 billion annual budget.
Markets, which began the day in an initial panic as Trump promised tariffs, recovered to a more cautionary footing.
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.
Adoption of the cryptocurrency has outpaced other transformative technologies like the internet and mobile phones.
President Donald Trump used the first hours of his second term in office Monday to make the emergency declaration.
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.
It’s the latest in several moves — announced in swift succession — that suggest a radical overhaul in Zuckerberg’s thinking about Meta.
On Tuesday, the overall yield on the US 10-Year Treasury Bond touched its highest intraday point, 4.699%, since last spring.
Will a shutdown happen? Maybe not. But what if it does? What would a holiday season shutdown actually mean?
The stakes could hardly be larger for General Motors, which pitched a simple message to investors: We have a plan and the future is bright.
With Trump expected to chase increased oil exports and more drilling in the US, OPEC+’s fear of losing market share looms larger than ever.