Trump, Rupert Murdoch and Wall Street Journal
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Wall Street kicks off a week full of potential flash points
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As data centers multiply across the United States, energy demand is increasing at a rapid pace. This has not escaped the notice of large investment firms from Wall Street.
Bankers and traders returned to work on a somber Tuesday morning in Midtown Manhattan, New York's financial epicenter, one day after a shooting that killed four people, including a senior Blackstone executive.
U.S. stocks on Tuesday gave up opening gains, with investors wading through a slew of quarterly reports and economic data.
Since OpenAI launched ChatGPT in November 2022, generative artificial-intelligence chatbots have attracted millions of users and provoked plenty of excitement. But some skeptics are asking: If this technology is destined to be as successful as its evangelists claim,
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Since January 2019, the 4-6-D has materialized 27 times. What’s more, in 62.96% of cases, the following week’s price action results in upside, with a median return of 3.49%. With ZIM stock closing at $16.55 on Monday, we can roughly estimate that the security may pop to around $17.13.
US stocks were mixed Monday and the S&P 500 eked out a record high for the sixth day in a row as investors digested the announcement of a trade deal between Washington and Brussels.
Baker Hughes nears $13.6B deal to buy Chart Industries, displacing Flowserve - FT. Cadence to pay $140 million to U.S. for selling chip design tech to Chinese university.
Sky-high valuations for tech heavyweights have left investors searching for alternatives. Plus, President Trump's trade policies haven’t affected all companies the same way, creating winners (and losers) for investors to discover.
Wall Street’s record-breaking, weeklong run ran out of momentum on Tuesday. The S&P 500 slipped 0.3% for its first drop after closing at an all-time high in six successive days. The Dow Jones Industrial Average sank 204 points, or 0.5%, and the Nasdaq composite shaved 0.4% off its own record.
The S&P 500 and the Nasdaq slipped from record highs on Tuesday as a series of downbeat earnings weighed on the indexes, while investors looked ahead to the U.S. Federal Reserve's policy meeting later in the day.