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By Noel Randewich and Pranav Kashyap (Reuters) -Wall Street shares were mixed on Tuesday, with steep losses in General Motors ...
Wall Street inched to another record on Tuesday following some mixed profit reports, as General Motors and other big U.S.
Wall Street is pointing lower before the opening bell with new tariffs announced for Europe and Mexico and as the unofficial ...
Six months into President Donald Trump’s second term, a quick glance at the stock market might offer a reassuring picture: The S&P 500 just closed above 6,300 points for the first time ever and has ...
General Motors is the latest company to record a hit from the president’s trade war. But so far, investors remain upbeat.
A generous grace period would give drugmakers time to sidestep most of the pain of looming duties.
Last week, the Trump administration announced that it reached a deal with Vietnam that would allow U.S. goods to enter the country duty-free, while Vietnamese exports to the U.S. would face a 20% levy ...
Wall Street is moving lower as the Trump administration steps up pressure on trading partners to make deals before a Wednesday deadline ...
Wall Street's biggest bull sees tech and AI driving an 11% stock gain, fueled by strong fundamentals, M&A activity, and ...
World shares are mostly higher, with financial markets shrugging off U.S. tariff pressures on its trading partners ...