Wall Street set for tepid open
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J.D. Vance slams Wall Street Journal's Epstein report
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Wall Street ends up
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Wall Street opened higher on Friday, with investors weighing a week of mixed economic signals and earnings reports, while Netflix's blockbuster profit failed to spark much excitement. At 09:30 a.m. ET,
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PepsiCo jumped 6.6% after delivering revenue and profit that topped Wall Street’s expectations. The drink and snack giant stood by its financial forecasts given in April, which projected lower full-year profit than previous forecasts due to increased costs from tariffs and a pullback in consumer spending.
As more people ask chatbots for financial advice, creating the right prompts is the key to getting useful answers.
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Major Wall Street brokerages have withdrawn their expectations for a September interest rate cut by the Bank of England, as inflation remains sticky and the labour market resilient.
Asian shares are mostly higher after Wall Street rose to records following better-than-expected updates on the economy and a mixed set of profit reports from big U.S. companies
Investors have spent much of this year dumping the dollar, but strategists at Citigroup are now calling a temporary time-out on that greenback hating. Having been bearish on the dollar DXY, a Citi team led by Dirk Willer made a tactical argument for switching to neutral in the short-term, in note to clients released Thursday.
A new drama involving the newspaper house, the Wall Street Journal (WSJ), and the US president, Donald Trump, has begun.
Disney CEO Bob Iger celebrated the company's 70th anniversary by opening the New York Stock Exchange trading session from Anaheim, California Thursday.