Markets sold off on Monday as investors digested Donald Trump's tariff announcements on Mexico, Canada and China.
Major U.S. stock indexes are poised to open sharply lower on Monday after President Donald Trump over the weekend signed executive orders calling for tariffs to be imposed on Canada, Mexico and China.
The DeepSeek saga offers investors valuable lessons on the risks that come from a market so heavily focused on one theme.
Donald Trump has said import taxes will "definitely happen" with the EU. He said the UK "is out of line" on trade with the US and told reporters "we'll see what happens".
Trump hints Britain may dodge tariffs as US-EU trade war looms - US president warns of EU tariffs ‘soon’ as row risks ...
US stock futures pointed to sharp losses for the major indexes, as Wall Street showed the effects of President Donald Trump’s ...
NVIDIA's newest GPUs sold out in the blink of an eye. When will restocks happen? Retailers from the US and UK markets have ...
Coinbase won approval from the United Kingdom’s Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) as a registered virtual asset service ...
Excessive valuations and investor overcrowding in US megacap tech stocks in our view represent the biggest risk to the ...
HelloFresh has won the race to scale and management are now re-orienting the strategy from a focus on growth to a focus on ...
Canada is targeting the U.S. auto market as part of its retaliatory tariffs. The EV market is called out by name, opening up ...
And in a note published Sunday, Goldman strategists led by David Kostin have set out the equity market implications of Trump's latest move. One way stocks may come under pressure is that large tariffs ...