All of this has taken a toll on U.S. stocks and the U.S. dollar (DX00), and given the advantage to financial markets in Europe and parts of Asia in particular.
But U.S. investors should understand that U.S. stocks, right now at least, may not bring the greatest rewards. The reasons for this shift aren't difficult to see. In the U.S., tariffs, trade war, ...
U.S. Federal Reserve officials remain uncertain about ... concluded that tariffs of 25% on Mexico and Canada and 10% on China would add 0.8 percentage point to inflation, a blow to the Fed's ...
Hugo Boss warned on Thursday of a further weakening in consumer confidence in the United States and China, sending its shares ...
While the administration's tough stance on international trade could strengthen the U.S. economy in the long run, the tariffs ...
Investors are pricing in several interest rate cuts from the Federal Reserve this year as growth slows and risks of a ...
Consumer prices rose 2.8% in February compared to a year ago, easing slightly over the first full month under President ...
Stock markets are plunging, consumers and businesses have started to sour on the economy, and economists are marking down ...
China has wrapped up its biggest political event of the year leaving one question unanswered: How far will it go to try to ...
Chinese government bond yields moved further away from January’s historic lows amid optimism in the faltering economy and a ...
China's consumer price index in February missed expectations and fell at the sharpest pace in 13 months, while producer price ...