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Browse our complete collection of financial news and analysis
Browse our complete collection of financial news and analysis
Browse our complete collection of financial news and analysis
Gold faces macro headwinds from interest rates and the SpaceX IPO. All eyes are on today's University of Michigan inflation data to see if the metal can sustain its current support above $4,000.
Broadcom's earnings disappointment triggered a global chip selloff, dragging South Korea's Kospi down 5.5% and sending Samsung and SK Hynix sharply lower, before looping back to pressure Nasdaq 100 futures ahead of Friday's open.
U.S. job market's resilience provides leeway for the Fed to act to take on inflationary pressure engendered by the Iran conflict.
With fuel costs quietly draining wallets and inflation expectations climbing, can the Fed tighten without tipping the economy over, or is the stagflation trap already sprung?
S&P 500 and Dow futures point higher in early trade; oil volatile on Hormuz risk while gold eases and the dollar flat ahead of the 8:30 a.m. retail sales print.
S&P 500 hovers near the flatline after Iran's IRGC boards two ships, sending WTI back above $95 ahead of a marquee week of earnings and the FOMC decision.
Markets weighed geopolitical risks against strong earnings expectations, while elevated valuations and upcoming corporate results kept investors focused on whether profit growth can justify recent gains in large-cap technology stocks.
New York manufacturing activity rebounded sharply in April with strong gains in orders, shipments, and employment, while rising input costs, weakening optimism, and softer capital spending signaled cautious outlook.
Markets rebounded after war-driven selloff, supported by resilient earnings, easing volatility, and AI-led tech strength, with strategists expecting momentum to continue despite geopolitical risks and upcoming Fed decision.
U.S. services PMI weakened in March as Iran war disruptions lifted costs and hurt employment, while markets rallied on softer data amid hopes the Fed may take a dovish stance.
U.S. job growth rebounded strongly in March, signaling a resilient labor market that could delay Federal Reserve rate cuts despite ongoing inflation concerns and a slight decline in labor force participation.
The Fed chose to wait and watch how inflation plays out in the aftermath of the Middle East shock but remained optimistic of the economic momentum.