Wall Street, Stock
Digest more
Top News
Impacts
Reactions and opinions
AOL |
By the close of trading on Thursday, the damage was apparent as investors adjusted for possibly sharply lower economic and corporate earnings growth at the hands of bruising Trump tariffs.
BBC |
The sweeping new tariffs announced by President Donald Trump on Wednesday triggered a slump in global stock markets, with the US S&P 500 having its worst day since the impact of Covid in 2020.
Wall Street Journal |
The market selloff continued Friday, with the China retaliation and recession fears pushing investors to sell stocks and hide in the safety of government bonds.
Read more on News Digest
Wall Street's "fear gauge" is headed for its highest close in more than four years, reflecting escalating unease about the market fallout from President Trump's tariff blitz. The Cboe Volatility Index,
Stocks slid to their lowest levels in several months, as the Dow and S&P hit their lowest intraday prices since August and the Nasdaq touched its cheapest level s
Investors are looking for signs the selling in the U.S. stock market may have reached a crescendo, but say that the check marks are not yet all ticked and there is room for further pain.
The tech-heavy Nasdaq dropped more than 20% from its all-time closing high touched in December, putting it on course to confirm a bear market
These are highly regulated institutions, so why risk a surprise audit, or a mean tweet that could lead to days of bad publicity.
A new Forbes survey of Wall Street heavyweights shows many who supported Trump’s economic promises have abandoned him – and a vast majority disapprove of the President’s economic policies.
The stock market cratered Thursday as fears of global economic slowdown driven by President Trump’s new tariffs spurred Wall Street’s worst day of losses since the outbreak of the
The S&P 500 was down 3.4% and the Dow Jones Industrial Average was down more than 1,100 points or 2.6% at 12:40 p.m.
The US stock market is about to conclude its worst quarter compared to the rest of the world since the 1980s. Obviously there have been lots of dips along the way to this ignominious milestone, which also means investors should have some attractive entry points to start buying again.