Is the Bull Market back?
When President Trump announced a tariff rollback on Chinese imports in early April—marking a sudden about-face from his “economic warfare or bust” stance—it didn’t just change policy.
When President Trump announced a tariff rollback on Chinese imports in early April—marking a sudden about-face from his “economic warfare or bust” stance—it didn’t just change policy.
In a significant development that marks the end of an era, Moody's Ratings downgraded the United States' long-term sovereign credit rating from AAA to Aa1 on Friday.
The recent stock market rally exhibits all the classic characteristics of a bear market rally rather than the beginning of a sustainable bull market.
Goldman Sachs strategist Peter Oppenheimer recently noted that "the asymmetry for equity investing is poor."
Don’t be surprised today when Jerome Powell reiterates, we are data driven. That is not what the white house wants to hear.
Don’t get FOMO fever. This market isn’t going to run away yet. It more than likely will get worse again before it’s recovered. Inside the numbers tell the story.
Wall Street's latest rally has all the substance of a Hollywood movie set—impressive from the front, but peek behind and you'll find nothing but wooden props and scaffolding.
As markets recover from the tariff-induced volatility that characterized the first quarter of 2025, a cleverly designed economic strategy is beginning to emerge from the chaos.
As financial markets attempt to recover, a high-stakes confrontation is brewing between President Trump and Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell.
In a move that shocked no one, Trump’s grand tariff scheme ran into a predictably avoidable snag when President Xi pushed back.