Wall Street's main indexes closed higher on Tuesday, with the S&P 500 and the Dow hitting their highest in more than a month, as investors assessed Donald Trump's first actions as U.S. president and breathed relief that he did not start his second term with blanket tariff increases.
Wariness is passé on Wall Street. Cautious uncertainty over lingering inflation and geopolitical turbulence have been replaced by giddiness over the deregulatory bonanza financial firms expect President Donald Trump’s administration to deliver.
In the client CPU market, AMD Ryzen processors continued to gain traction. The company captured 23.9% of the desktop CPU market share in the first-quarter of 2024 — the largest
Netflix shot up 14.6% after it reported adding nearly 19 million subscribers during the holiday-season quarter and it topped sales and profit targets. The video streaming service’s expansion into live programming appears to be paying off as it wrapped up its best year ever with more than $40 billion in revenue.
The editorial board of The Wall Street Journal is criticizing President Trump’s decision to pardon more than 1,500 his supporters who attacked the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. “This is a
Wall Street Pepe continues to set records as the fastest-selling meme coin ICO in history. The presale has already reached $55 million and will close in 25 days.
U.S. stock indexes are drifting higher following a mostly encouraging batch of profit reports from big companies.
The Wall Street Journal editorial board tore into President Donald Trump for pardoning the rioters who attacked the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.
Wall Street’s main indexes rose on Tuesday, with the blue-chip Dow at a more than one-month high, as investors assessed President Donald Trump’s executive orders after taking office and awaited his first move on trade policy. In morning trading, the Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 423 points, or 1%, to 43,911.
Another engine of value creation for Wall Street that has been slow in recent years is the IPO market — which is also set to pick up.
Hindenburg Research founder Nate Anderson, a foe of Carl Icahn and the Adani family, cites the stress of his job as he shuts down the firm.