Wall Street, Trump and tariffs
Digest more
A day after Nvidia set a new record by reaching a $4 trillion market cap, at least three Wall Street analysts issued new reports that rated the stock a buy, according to Bloomberg data. The bulls pointed to Nvidia’s role as the premier chipmaker and the fact that compared to its fundamentals,
The White House rolled out a series of new tariff announcements this week, yet the S&P 500, Nasdaq, bitcoin, and Nvidia have all notched all-time highs over the last 24 hours. Meanwhile, the VIX — Wall Street’s fear gauge — has collapsed well below its long-run average after surging to historic highs in April.
A mixed day of trading left the U.S. stock market split, as Wall Street’s momentum slowed after setting record highs in each of the last two days
US stocks fell on Friday after President Trump threatened Canada with a 35% tariff on its imports to the US and floated higher blanket levies. Late Thursday, Trump on Truth Social posted a letter to Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney,
The stock market and bond market are forecasting different scenarios for the U.S. economy. The former projects optimism — higher equity prices, earnings growth, broad enthusiasm — but the latter sees weakening growth. Apollo chief economist Torsten Slok highlighted this disconnect in research published this week.
3don MSN
Wall Street was relatively quiet with major indexes ticking up modestly as the Trump administration seeks to win more favorable deals with global trading partners.
Futures on Wall Street have tanked in the early hours of Friday morning Indian time, after US President Donald Trump teased a 'major statement' he intends to make on Russia on Monday. The Dow futures are down over 200 points,
2don MSN
Enthusiasm for McDonald’s resurrection of the fan favorite Snack Wrap made it all the way to Wall Street, as shares of McDonald’s rose after one prominent firm upgraded its rating for the fast food giant.