History has shown that the economy typically rebounds from a shutdown within a couple of months. But each day it drags on brings a greater risk that the economy won’t just bend, it will start to break ...
America’s economy and stock market keep growing, buoyed by robust consumer spending and AI mega-growth. But hiring is at a standstill, inflation is rising, loan defaults are abundant and Americans ...
There is a perception on Wall Street that “underneath strong economic numbers, there are crevasses of credit and valuation risks that are deepening and broadening,” wrote Macquarie strategists Viktor ...
The extraordinary trade war President Donald Trump unleashed has been taking a toll on both the Chinese and American economies. While China’s economy is in a far more precarious state, mostly due to ...
The shutdown is stifling our ability to grow,” said Grant Richardson, who founded a wine import company, Pangea Selections, in 2019.
The US economy’s comeback in the second quarter was just revised higher again, and economists estimate that momentum carried on in the third quarter, underscoring the resilience of the world’s largest ...
President Donald Trump’s sanctions crackdown on Russia risks undermining one of the bright spots in the Trump economy: tame ...
President Donald Trump has spent much of the year urging the Federal Reserve to deliver aggressive rate cuts in order to boost the economy. But the government shutdown ironically threatens the very ...
European leaders vowed to work in coordination to ratchet up the pressure on Russia as the so-called “coalition of the ...
The stock market rally has already defied expectations this year, shrugging off geopolitical strife, economic uncertainty and global trade tensions to reach fresh record highs. Some analysts say the ...
Gone are the days when Canada’s Prime Minister Mark Carney could go into a meeting with President Donald Trump with a goal of, at a minimum, doing no harm. Instead, when the two sit down in Washington ...
“The economy’s prospects are tethered to the fortunes and spending of the well-to-do,” Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody’s Analytics, told CNN. “Those in the top 20% of the income distribution are ...
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