Stocks took a breather on Thursday, stalling a three-day rally that had taken US and European stocks to within striking ...
Saudi Arabia’s crown prince said Thursday the kingdom wants to invest US$600 billion in the United States over the next four ...
Investors are watching for signs that one of China’s biggest spending seasons may jumpstart the country’s consumer stocks ...
When President Donald Trump joined tech executives on Tuesday to tout a multibillion-dollar artificial intelligence project ...
Alcoa Corp., the largest US aluminum producer, warned that a threatened 25% tariff on imports of the metal from Canada would ...
Oracle Corp. has charged out of the gate in 2025, after its best year in a quarter-century. A plan unveiled with President ...
General Electric Co. exceeded Wall Street expectations for profit and sales in the final months of the year as the jet engine ...
U.S. President Donald Trump told the World Economic Forum on Thursday that businesses should make their products in the United States if they want to avoid facing a tariff.
President Donald Trump said he would ask Saudi Arabia and other OPEC nations to “bring down the cost of oil” and reiterated his threat to use tariffs to bring manufacturing back to the US as he ...
The roller-coaster governance model of Donald Trump is already back on display: he was quiet on tariffs during his inauguration day, only to say later that evening they could be coming by February.
Ontario Teachers’ Pension Plan is turning more attention to European markets as other investors remain fixated on the U.S., its chief executive officer said.
A massive rally in emerging-market junk bonds has sparked investor appetite for two of the most far-fetched trades: dollar-denominated debt from Venezuela and Lebanon.