Wall Street, Stocks climbed Friday
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Wall Street traders and investors have been sent to the brink over the past week by President Donald Trump's tariff policy, scrambling to figure out strategies and calming clients as trillions were w...
From Reuters
“Obviously,” said Jamie Dimon, JPMorgan Chase’s chief executive, “the China stuff is significant. We don’t know the full effect.”
From The New York Times
One quarter in, the tone is entirely different and executives are worried about tariffs and their impact, especially after the market gyrations of this month.
From Wall Street Journal
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Stocks closed higher after the White House voiced optimism in striking a trade deal with China, but stiff economic headwinds remain.
The bond selloff carries direct implications for everyday people, since rising yields drive up interest rates for mortgages, credit cards and just about any other consumer loan, e
Through all the market madness of the past two years, there has been one truth universally acknowledged by the analysts who track healthcare stocks on Wall Street: that the market for the new, effective obesity drugs will be even bigger than anyone expects.
2don MSN
Some of Wall Street's brightest minds have been sounding off about President Donald Trump's tariffs.
With markets crashing after U.S. President Donald Trump announced his latest tariffs, Citigroup’s banking head Viswas Raghavan called a global meeting of senior bankers on Monday and told them to get on the phone with their clients.
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2don MSN
U.S. stocks soared to one of their best days in history after President Trump said he would back off on most of his tariffs temporarily.
"We believe the whole trajectory of earnings for TSLA remains too high and could face negative revisions post 1Q25 results," UBS analysts said.
Wall Street's major averages look for direction on Friday, as the U.S.-China trade war seemed to heat up, with China further retaliating against President Donald Trump's tariffs. Early on and the S&P 500 (SP500) was near even,